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Buy Irish Art Collector’s Edition & Archival Prints
Museum-grade Irish art | FSC-certified frames
For collectors & design-led interiors
Own a piece of Irish culture

Her face was on Irish banknotes for decades.Hazel Lavery — painted by her husband Sir John Lavery — became one of the mo...
24/04/2026

Her face was on Irish banknotes for decades.

Hazel Lavery — painted by her husband Sir John Lavery — became one of the most recognised images in Irish history. The woman on the old Irish pound. The painting that made him famous.

Now you can bring it home.

Archival giclée prints from €55. Free worldwide shipping. 🔗 Link in bio.

One of the only paintings made in the immediate aftermath of the Easter Rising.Belgian artist Edmond Delrenne walked ont...
01/04/2026

One of the only paintings made in the immediate aftermath of the Easter Rising.
Belgian artist Edmond Delrenne walked onto the ruins of Sackville Street days after the fighting ended and drew what he saw. The GPO still standing. Nelson’s Pillar through the dust. A street reduced to rubble.
110 years later, that image is a fine art print. Printed on 230gsm premium paper. Framed or unframed. Free worldwide shipping.
April 24th marks the 110th anniversary. This is the print for it.
Link in bio.

29/03/2026

The Meeting on the Turret Stairs print by Frederic William Burton. One of Ireland’s famous Romantic paintings. Archival giclée reproduction, framed or unframed.

This 19th-century Irish painting is breaking hearts all over again. 💙The Meeting on the Turret Stairs by Frederic Willia...
25/03/2026

This 19th-century Irish painting is breaking hearts all over again. 💙

The Meeting on the Turret Stairs by Frederic William Burton. Painted in 1864. Now going viral worldwide.
It depicts the final meeting between Hellelil and Hildebrand — a princess and her bodyguard, hopelessly in love, knowing they can never be together.
The painting has lived in the National Gallery of Ireland for over 150 years. But right now, a whole new generation is discovering it for the first time.
Some stories never age.

🖼️ Available as an archival print at BuyIrishArt.com — link in bio.

We hope you have a wonderful Christmas, and thank you so much for your continued support. It truly means the world to us...
19/12/2025

We hope you have a wonderful Christmas, and thank you so much for your continued support. It truly means the world to us.

Black Friday is live. Get 15% off all prints with code IRISH15.Our most popular pieces sell out every year — order early...
27/11/2025

Black Friday is live. Get 15% off all prints with code IRISH15.
Our most popular pieces sell out every year — order early to avoid delays.
Free Worldwide shipping available.

There’s nothing quiet about this stream. It roars forward, alive with colour and motion. In The Rushing Stream, painted ...
26/11/2025

There’s nothing quiet about this stream. It roars forward, alive with colour and motion. In The Rushing Stream, painted around 1891, Roderic O’Conor doesn’t simply depict a landscape—he electrifies it.

O’Conor, working in the orbit of Gauguin and the Pont-Aven circle, brought a bold new energy to Irish painting. His brushstrokes don’t just describe—they surge, collide and radiate. Vermilion reds pulse through thickets of trees. Vivid greens and cobalt blues clash and twist. And at the centre, water crashes in bursts of white and gold, dissolving into a storm of pure motion.

This Gallery Edition print captures that energy with exceptional fidelity. Printed on 200 gsm archival matte paper with pigment inks, and offered in natural wood, black or white frames, it is ready to bring colour, rhythm and power into your space.

This is not a painting that whispers. It moves, it insists, it reminds you that nature is never still.

There are places that feel untouched by time—where rock meets sea and silence speaks louder than wind. Murlough Bay and ...
26/11/2025

There are places that feel untouched by time—where rock meets sea and silence speaks louder than wind. Murlough Bay and Fair Head, painted by Bartholomew Colles Watkins in the 19th century, captures one such place with remarkable reverence. A lone figure walks the shoreline, dwarfed by cliffs and sea spray, while Fair Head rises sharply in the distance like a sentinel of the northern coast.

Watkins knew this landscape not just by sight, but by memory. He travelled Ireland with a deep appreciation for wild grandeur and dramatic light. In this composition, he brings precision to every cresting wave, every moss-darkened stone. The result is a painting that feels both expansive and intimate—deeply rooted in place and time.

Now faithfully reproduced as a museum-quality Collector’s Edition, this artwork is printed on 250 gsm archival matte paper using pigment inks that capture the tonal richness of the original. Each piece is available unframed or in handcrafted hardwood frames—ready to hang, and designed to last.

For those who know the Antrim coast, or long for the quiet strength of its scenery, this is more than a landscape. It is a memory. A legacy. A view that holds its breath.

In a quiet woodland clearing, a simple exchange unfolds. A travelling toy-seller reaches out to a child, offering a ratt...
23/11/2025

In a quiet woodland clearing, a simple exchange unfolds. A travelling toy-seller reaches out to a child, offering a rattle—a gesture both tender and timeless. Painted in 1857, The Toy-Seller by William Mulready captures more than a scene from Victorian life; it reflects the emotional currents beneath everyday moments.

Mulready, one of Ireland’s most celebrated genre painters, was a master of subtle expression. His figures do not pose; they feel. Their glances, gestures, and silences reveal stories far beyond the frame. In this painting, protection, curiosity, and care converge in a single act of giving—rendered with luminous colour and astonishing detail.

This Collector’s Edition fine art print brings that moment into the present. Printed on museum-grade archival matte paper with rich pigment inks, and paired with your choice of handcrafted wood frame, it offers a level of craftsmanship that honours the integrity of the original.

To live with this work is to invite stillness, memory, and a touch of 19th-century storytelling into your space—refined, emotive, and enduring.

Painted in the shadow of war and uncertainty, The Virgin of Éire emerged not as a retreat from modern life, but as a res...
23/11/2025

Painted in the shadow of war and uncertainty, The Virgin of Éire emerged not as a retreat from modern life, but as a response to it. Created in the early 1940s, this powerful composition by Mainie Jellett brings together Ireland’s spiritual guardians—St Patrick, St Brigid, the Madonna and Child—in a vision that fuses Cubist abstraction with deep cultural symbolism.

Jellett believed that sacred art could offer more than comfort. It could restore clarity. It could remind a nation of its roots. Trained in Paris under André Lhote and Albert Gleizes, she returned to Ireland with a mission: to reinterpret faith and identity through a modern visual language. This painting is one of her most profound answers to that call.

With its rhythmic geometry and symbolic palette, The Virgin of Éire feels at once ancient and entirely modern. It’s not only a landmark of Irish Modernism—it’s a devotional work, rich with meaning and national memory.

Now available as a Collector’s Edition fine art print, this museum-quality reproduction is printed on 250 gsm archival matte paper, framed in sustainably sourced wood, and protected with shatterproof plexiglass. Ready to hang, and shipped worldwide.

To live with this piece is to carry a part of Ireland’s cultural and spiritual legacy into your home—bold, visionary, and rooted in faith.

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