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The right space: 150 years of housing a national gallery's library and archive collection

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 December 2017

Andrea Lydon*
Affiliation:
Head of Library & Archives, National Gallery of Ireland, Merrion Square West, Dublin, IRELAND Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

The National Gallery of Ireland is the country's premier art institution. It houses the nation's collection of fine art in addition to a collection of library and archive material relating to the visual arts. The library and archive collections play an invaluable role supporting the work of the gallery and are regularly consulted by external researchers. Surprisingly, for more than a century there was no dedicated library space allocated to this collection. This article explores the development of the collection and the space it has occupied within the Gallery over the last 150 years, chronicling the challenges the gallery has faced housing this growing collection. This article outlines the situation today and concludes with an outline of the gallery's future plans for the library and archive in its efforts to create a space that will be a fitting home for this remarkable collection.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © ARLIS/UK&Ireland 2017 

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References

1. The Act establishing the National Gallery of Ireland was passed into law on the 10 August 1854.

2. Letter from Sir Walter Armstrong to the Treasury, 1898, NGI Archives.

3. Board Minutes, 28th July 1919.

4. National Gallery of Ireland, Byelaws, October 1919.