$49.00
$49.00
$49.00
$49.00
$49.00
Outer Frame Size
|
Image Size
|
|
Small
Frame
|
36 x 33cm 14.2" x 13" |
19 x 15cm 7.5" x 6" |
Medium
Frame
|
50 x 43cm 19.7"x 17" |
31 x 24cm 12.2" x 9.4" |
Large
Frame
|
76 x 64cm 30" x 25.2" |
52 x 40cm 20.4" x 15.7" |
Outer Mount Size
|
Image Size
|
|
Small
Mount
|
33 x 30cm 13" x 11.8" |
19 x 15cm 7.5" x 6" |
Medium
Mount
|
47 x 40cm 18.5" x 15.7" |
31 x 24cm 12.2" x 9.4" |
Large
Mount
|
72 x 60cm 28.3" x 23.6" |
52 x 40cm 20.4" x 15.7" |
Unframed prints come in a double mount with backing board in a sealed cellophane display bag so that all that is needed is the glass and outer moulding.
They can also be shipped with just the protected print itself rolled up in a heavy cardboard tube if preferred. Just drop me a message if so.
Chris :-)
Museum quality art prints using archival inks created from my original canvas oil and acrylic paintings. I photograph and print these limited editions of 200 myself and the prints are available in three sizes both framed and unframed. Click on the print options and links above the Add to Cart button for more information.
A painting of the Gravediggers Pub, Prospect Square, Dublin. A wonderful old style atmospheric traditional Irish pub with lots of wooden partitions and nooks and crannies, old weather beaten wooden floors, and has featured in many films and advertisements over the years. Indeed it is a favourite for interior subjects for both artists and photographers. It has been in the Kavanagh family for six generations since Victorian times in 1833. The pub has never changed hands but been passed down to each generation.
The Gravediggers name is pretty self-explanatory as it is built into the wall of Glasnevin Cemetery where after working long shifts the gravediggers would come to drink.
The Gravediggers is a pub for drinking and nothing more. When Luke Kelly of the Dubliners died in 1984, he was to be buried at Glasnevin Cemetery. The rest of the Dubliners folk band along with the Chieftains and U2 poured into the Gravediggers along with their instruments. Ciaran Kavanagh, the current owner, and who was working in the bar at the time then aged fourteen, remembers his dad Eugene saying “We don’t allow it” as music wasn’t played in the Gravediggers. “It’s just a place to drink, it’s always been about drinking “ Ciaran said.