![A black and white ink drawing of a woman leaning against a man, their shadows cast on the ground.](/sites/default/files/styles/content_hero/public/2021-09/gunter-schollkopf-bloom-shopping-c-the-estate-of-gunter-schollkopf.-photo-c-national-gallery-of-ireland.jpg?itok=KGgwSzUb&cache-buster=d330ed0832&coords_hash=baafc44994)
21 May – 21 August 2022
Sir Hugh Lane Room | Admission free
This exhibition celebrated James Joyce’s Ulysses, which was published in its entirety in Paris on 2 February 1922 – the writer’s 40th birthday. 34 works by German artist Günter Schöllkopf, presented by his sister to the National Gallery of Ireland, were displayed for the first time. The Stuttgart-born etcher and illustrator held a lifelong fascination with Joyce. These striking drawings and etchings from the 1960s and 70s bring to life characters and episodes from the modernist novel, offering a new context in which to see Molly and Leopold Bloom, Stephen Dedalus and Buck Mulligan.
Curator: Niamh MacNally
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Bloomsday
A few Joycean highlights from our collection.
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Dublin: James Joyce and Erich Hartmann
Photographer Erich Hartmann was inspired by James Joyce's Ulysses
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New to the Nation
Discover recently acquired works of art
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Dutch Drawings: highlights from the Rijksmuseum
On view until 6 November.