Renvyle House
Renvyle, Co. Galway
Roundstone, Connemara (1916) by Jack Butler Yeats Oil on panel, 23 x
36cm (9 x 14”)
This
painting by Jack Butler Yeats was bought by Oliver St John
Gogarty at an exhibtion in 1918. Oliver St. John Gogarty was a
man who certainly had a zest for life, not being content with a successful
career as a surgeon he also was known as a poet, author, playwright, an
athlete, pilot and senator. A huge
admirer of Connemara, Gogarty, a friend of W.B. Yeats, had acquired Renvyle
House in 1917. Jack also knew Gogarty and illustrated his 1918 volume, The Ship and Other Poems.
Oliver St. John Gogarty
Oliver’s house at Renvyle in
Galway was a very old dwelling which had existed on the site since the seventeenth
century with the remains of Renvyle Castle being located nearby. When Gogarty
purchased Renvyle House in 1917 he had intended to run it as a hotel but
decided to keep it instead as a private residence. The house came with two
hundred acres but this was divided in half by the Land Commission among its
tenants. The house had many rooms including one that had a ghost and a barred
window. It was during a visit to Renvyle after the Gogarty purchased the house
that the poet WB Yeats and his wife aimed to get to the bottom of the mystery
of this haunted room. With the creation of the Irish Free State, Gogarty was
appointed as a Senator which made him and Renvyle House a target for Anti-Treaty
Republicans.
Renvyle House, Galway
Three men commandeered Renvyle
in February 1923 and stayed the night. The following morning more men arrived
and saturated the house and its contents with petrol and set it alight. Oliver was heartbroken over the loss of the
house but being the pragmatic man that he was, he knew it could be rebuilt.
However it was the loss of what was contained inside the walls of the house
that grieved him more. The portrait of his mother painted when she was a young
woman together with many other paintings by artists such as Jack B Yeats and
his collection of over 3,000 precious books were incinerated. Oliver recorded
that the house now only comprised of ‘ten tall chimneys stand bare on Europe’s
extreme verge’. Gogarty rebuilt the Renvyle and opened it as a hotel which it
continues as today. Gogarty’s
daughter, Brenda, later Mrs. Desmond Williams, inherited this painting and it
was part of the Williams’s prestigious collection of Irish art for many years.
You can read about the history of Renvyle House and Oliver St.
John Gogarty's art collection in my latest book ' Irish Country Houses -
Portraits and Painters'