Crawford Art Gallery announces date of closure for major redevelopment
-
From: Office of Public Works
- Published on: 20 August 2024
- Last updated on: 20 August 2024
Crawford Art Gallery has announced the closure date for their upcoming major redevelopment project, Transforming Crawford Art Gallery.
The gallery will close its doors to the public on the evening of Sunday, September 22, Crawford Art Gallery director Mary McCarthy has confirmed.
The temporary closure is to allow for an ambitious multi-million euro redevelopment on the Crawford site.
The capital project, Transforming Crawford Art Gallery, is set to add:
• 50% of additional space – increased spaces for exhibitions, new state-of-the-art storage for its collection and a new Learn & Explore facility for educational programmes.
• A restaurant facing onto Half Moon Street.
• An entrance restored to the original historic Customs House entrance on Emmet Place, with new landscaping and entrance.
• A new public gallery on the top floor of a five-storey extension offering a birds-eye view of Cork city landmarks.
• Improved accessibility, lifts and toilet facilities over several floors.
Transforming Crawford Art Gallery is part of Project Ireland 2040, in partnership with the Department of Tourism, Culture, Art, Gaeltacht, Sports and Media and the Office of Public Works (OPW).
A tender process is currently underway for the building and renovation works which will see a contractor appointed and on site in the spring of 2025. The redevelopment works are estimated to take two and a half years to complete.
Staff will continue working in the building following the public closure, throughout the autumn and winter of 2024, to safely remove the gallery’s treasured collection, which will in part be housed in secure storage facilities off site for the duration of the redevelopment. This period is necessary to remove many large and fragile works.
As the only National Cultural Institution located entirely outside of Dublin, Crawford Art Gallery is home to over 3,500 works of art.
The redevelopment designs are the result of years of planning by an interdisciplinary design team headed up by the award-winning Irish firm Grafton Architects.
“Cork is growing, and so too are we,” gallery director Mary McCarthy said. “We are excited to be at this phase of our ambitious project, for Crawford and for Cork. Transforming Crawford Art Gallery has been years in the making.”
“We have collaborated closely with our design team and the OPW to ensure we conserve the many special elements and qualities of our buildings, while we also expand our spaces to ensure the building is fit for purpose, and sustainable for generations to come.”
“We look forward to sharing news of the building works over the next two and a half years, and to delivering an exceptional project here on Emmet Place for all our audiences. We are very grateful to our loyal visitors and champions for their continued support.”
“This development is extremely good news for Crawford Art Gallery and for Cork,” Rose McHugh, Chair of Crawford Art Gallery, said.
“This unprecedented public investment demonstrates confidence in Crawford Art Gallery, Cork city’s cultural heritage, and its future potential. We are very grateful to Minister Catherine Martin and her officials for their deep commitment to the gallery and its future.”
“We recognise that the public will miss the gallery during the necessary closure period, but the redevelopment will ensure the gallery can thrive into the future.”
Gallery staff will continue to work off-site throughout the period of closure, conducting an extensive care-of-the-collection programme to conserve artworks, and liaising with other cultural institutions on a touring programme.
Learn & Explore outreach and education programmes will continue to be delivered in a variety of venues and locations, as well as online.
Works from the Crawford collection will also be on loan to other galleries and museums all over Ireland, including Doneraile Court, Cork Public Museum, Hillsborough Castle, The National Museum of Ireland, the Hugh Lane Gallery, Uillinn West Cork Arts and more.
For regular updates on Transforming Crawford Art Gallery throughout the closure period, it’s best to sign up to the gallery’s newsletter on www.crawfordartgallery.ie or follow the gallery’s social media channels.
www.crawfordartgallery.ie Crawford Art Gallery, Emmet Place, Cork, Ireland.
About Crawford Art Gallery
Crawford Art Gallery is an Irish National Cultural Institution (NCI) dedicated to contemporary and historic visual art, located in a significant heritage building in the heart of Cork city. Offering a dynamic programme of temporary exhibitions, it also houses a collection of national importance which tells the compelling story of Cork and Ireland over the last three centuries.
Originally built in 1724 as the city’s Customs House, the Gallery is home to the famous Canova Casts, gifted to Cork two centuries ago. Featured in the gallery’s collection of over 3,000 objects are contemporary artists Aideen Barry, Gerard Byrne, Maud Cotter, Dorothy Cross and Sean Scully, as well as much-loved works by Irish artists James Barry, Harry Clarke, Mainie Jellett, Seán Keating, Daniel Maclise, Norah McGuinness and Jack B. Yeats.
About Transforming Crawford Art Gallery
Crawford Art Gallery closes from 23 September 2024 to undergo an enormously exciting capital redevelopment project.
This multi-million euro investment will increase gallery space by 50%, preserve and protect three centuries of existing built heritage, and create a cultural legacy for a new century as Cork continues to grow.
The project is a Government of Ireland 2040 project funded by the department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media in partnership with the Office of Public Works (OPW).
The award-winning Grafton Architects have worked on a redevelopment design that includes a new Learn and Explore facility for public engagement, significant storage for the National Collection at Crawford, a new entrance, and a dramatically improved public realm including new café facing onto Half Moon Street.
The building’s entrance will be reoriented to Emmet Place in line with the original Customs House layout dating to 1724.
A large new public gallery space will be created five stories above Cork City, creating a new vantage point for visitors to view city centre landmarks including Shandon and St Finbarre’s Cathedral.
Opening Hours
Monday–Saturday 10.00am–5.00pm. Late opening Thursdays until 8.00pm. Sundays and Bank Holidays from 11am - 4pm. Entry is free.
Tours
Free Tours on Sundays and Bank Holiday Mondays at 2pm. Free Tours on Thursday 6.30 pm. This project is in support of the Night-Time Economy and funded by The Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media.