Protean artist

Michael Waldron considers the drawing and painting of the celebrated writer Edith Œ Somerville


Protean artist
Writer

Artist

Back to this Issue

Category
Arts Lives and Exhibitions
Painting

Share

Late in life, Edith Œ Somerville reflected that she wished she had given ‘a great deal more time to painting and a great deal less to hunting’. She is best known today as one half of Somerville and Ross, the writing partnership she maintained with her cousin and intimate, Violet Martin (1862–1915), of Ross House, Connemara, Co Galway. According to her friend and biographer Geraldine Cummins, however, Somerville ‘wanted above all else to be a great painter’. Yet, despite such aspirations, her work as a visual artist is now little known and generally restricted to book illustrations and the very few paintings held in public collections.

To read this article in full, subscribe or buy this edition of the Irish Arts Review

More from the Summer 2026 edition

Behind the face

Behind the face

Artist Oliver Murphy’s interest in portraiture developed out of his deep fascination with faces, writes Róisín Kennedy


Preview Article
Acts of looking

Acts of looking

In IMMA’s exhibition of works by Camille Souter and Alberta Whittle, Sarah Kelleher finds a current of joy running through both artists’ practices


Preview Article
Connections

Connections

John Rainey appraises the varied sculptural practice of artist Blaine O’Donnell


Preview Article
Shopping cart0
There are no products in the cart!
Continue shopping
0