Glebe Gallery

Gallery with gardens in County Donegal, Ireland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Glebe House and Glebe Gallery are located just outside the town of Letterkenny near Churchill. The house was built in 1828.[2] The English portrait and landscape painter Derek Hill lived and worked there from 1954 until he presented the house and his art collection to the Irish state in 1982.[2][1] Hill's former studio has been converted into a modern gallery with changing exhibitions while his art collection is shown in his former home together with European and oriental furniture and William Morris wallpapers and fabrics. The collection includes works by Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Louis le Brocquy, Graham Sutherland, Auguste Renoir, Jack Butler Yeats, Oskar Kokoschka, Patrick Swift and the native Tory Island painter, James Dixon.[2][3][4]

Former namesSt Columb’s[1]
Alternative namesDerek Hill House
LocationGlebe, Church Hill, County Donegal, F92 WP70, Letterkenny, Ireland
Opened1828; 198 years ago (1828)
Quick facts Former names, Alternative names ...
Glebe House and Gallery
Red two-story house amid trees and bushes
Glebe Gallery is located in Ireland
Glebe Gallery
Location within Ireland
Glebe Gallery is located in County Donegal
Glebe Gallery
Glebe Gallery (County Donegal)
Former namesSt Columb’s[1]
Alternative namesDerek Hill House
General information
LocationGlebe, Church Hill, County Donegal, F92 WP70, Letterkenny, Ireland
Opened1828; 198 years ago (1828)
OwnerOffice of Public Works
Design and construction
Known forHouse of Derek Hill
Close

Run by the Office of Public Works the gallery is open for a limited season each year - around Easter and then from June to the end of September. Access to the permanent collection in Glebe House is by guided tour only. The woodland gardens, which border Lough Gartan, are open all year round.

In May 2023, an outdoor classroom for the local Gartan National School to interact with arts, culture and nature in a holistic manner, was opened on the premises.[5][6]

In July 2024 it attained full-accreditation from the Heritage Council’s Museum Standards Programme for Ireland for maintaining its mark of excellence.[7] In September that year, the gallery and house both closed to facilitate conservation works;[8] and in November it received a green flag award for sustainability in its parks and green spaces.[9]

In January 2025, the gallery was re-opened when conservation work finished, with the house remaining closed until conservation works there finish in the summer.[8]

References

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