PJ Harvey
Photographer Seamus Murphy Taken in the ‘Deadhouse' catacombs beneath the courtyard of Somerset House December 2014
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PJ Harvey
Photographer Seamus Murphy Taken in the ‘Deadhouse' catacombs beneath the courtyard of Somerset House December 2014
Two beautiful poetry books have landed in my lap... #poetry #pjharvey #seamusmurphy #leonardcohen #leonardcohenpoetry #bookoflonging #thehollowofthehand #waterstonescrouchend
As the world celebrated the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, a Belfast family instead grieved.
ReduxStock: Photo by Seamus Murphy / VII / Redux of people at a Good Friday event in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on The Atlantic, May 6, 2023.
Seamus Murphy | Tributes in Verse
Blackpool has links with more individuals who have contributed to Cork’s cultural history than might initially be realised.
Chief amongst these is the sculptor, Seamus Murphy.
At the age of 14 he began an apprenticeship which ended with him becoming, in his own words, “the only legitimate stonecarver in Cork for 25 years’’.
In 1934 he opened his studio/workshop on Watercourse Road, Blackpool. There he produced many of his works which are now judiciously distributed throughout the city.
Seamus Murphy was to stonecarving what Harry Clarke was to stained-glass windows or James Joyce to literature, each a renowned master at their craft.
For generations poetry has been used as a concise and eloquent way of paying tribute to individuals who stood apart in terms of their contribution to our nation’s cultural heritage.
In 1980, five years after his death, The Cork Review published an edition dedicated to the memory of Seamus, featuring recollections of the man and his work through essays and poetry.
Blackpool library has chosen the poems printed in that volume as its focus in celebrating Heritage Week 2020.
In this exceptional year when we came to realise that not everything we take for granted is carved in stone we remember Seamus Murphy whose works in stone remind us that some things do, in fact, endure.
Each poem is a poignant reflection on the sculptor. Murphy himself might have approved of how Christy Kenneally, a native of Blackpool, put it:
“And when ‘twas time to die
God chisel hammer-honed him down
to His image and likeness
called his name
and freed him from his plinth ‘’.
Here is a selection of poems, chosen by library staff about Seamus Murphy:
Seamus Murphy
‘Stone is in my system’
Of the materials he mastered
Stone meant the most to him:
Time and again
The tough and stubborn grain
Was civilised
By his bright chisels
Showing its secret strength
As clear thought,
As sound feeling.
No small matter this
Recreation
Of the deeper core
Now tools forget his hand
And lose precision.
The streets grow dull without that keen
perception,
Without those eyes
And that warm wit
Among curious lines.
Light on his feet,
With his grey hair on end,
Gentle, but stubborn and active as a terrier,
A small man goes away
Leaving us here like old dust and chippings.
He will be missed by all manner of people.
And yet we have been lucky:
Such cut and character
Bite into time,
And so we keep his mark.
Look: on her mountain the young saint’s
Tranquil stance.
And the steady face of courage in the city park.
by Seán Lucy
Gobnait (for Seamus Murphy)
witch now in this stone bewitched,
stone robed in our present mythologies
of ordinariness : a Bandon cloak
about your buxom form, no hint
of holy or satanic slyness;
around you a feast of green hills,
the familiar drone of your bees.
Lady, for so now you are, behold my
incompetence to reach back to innocence,
to shift the mandrake root by prayer :
I need an older medicine,
as once you practised in the nights
on stone alters alone with the
winds and hills for congregations.
such priests are dead as were before
Patrick and taught no grim theologies
but the unisons of earth and star:
Gobnait, recall the midnights and the
moons, saint of people and their witch,
and from your stone plinth hear me:
magic the mandrake from the root.
by Robert O’ Donoghue
In Memoriam Seamus Murphy: October 1975
It is deserted today in the municipal park;
Deserted swing and slide, deserted path and riverbank;
Yet the more deserted the municipal park by the river
The more life-like appears the Virgin of the Twilight.
What is a sculpture, Daddy?
A small girl asks of her father
As they wander through the municipal park
And he points to a sculpture
Named Virgin of the Twilight
And he stoops down and he explains:
“That was made by a man called Seamus Murphy
And it is a sculpture ‘’.
And the daughter stares up at the Madonna and child
Carved in white limestone
And the father stares down at the daughter transfixed
In her fascination with the mystery of birth
Knowing that she too one day will wait
Alone and desolate in the world
Bereft lit creased soaked scourged
By wind rain sunlight and snow.
“And where is Seamus Murphy now? ‘’
Cried out the small girl turning upward her eyes:
“He has gone home to God...’’ stammered the father
“And...’’ as he groped for words
She interposed as though
Already having arrived at
A final, restful and most satisfactory conclusion:
“And he has left his sculpture behind him, Daddy’’.
And the sculpture remains:
And father after daughter
Disappears off
Into the vanishing light.
by Paul Durcan
Seamus Murphy, died 2nd October, 1975.
Walking in the graveyard, a maze
Of angels and families
The path is coiled like a shaving of wood
We stop to read the names
In time they all come around
Again, the spearbearer, the spongebearer
Ladder and pillar
Scooped from shallow beds
Carrying black clothes
Whiskey and ham for the wake
The city revolves
White peaks of churches clockwise lifting and falling
The hill below the barracks
The sprouting sandstone walls go past
Finding below the old clockface
The long rambles of the spider
In the narrow bed of a saint
The names in stones travelling
Into a winter of stone.
by Eiléan Ni Chuilleanáin
Seamus Murphy - Sculptor
The hat
incongruous
upon a head
half-finished.
The face beneath
crevised and quarried
by the dint of searching...
searching for life and grace
where we saw
stone:
that face
soft planed
sandpapered
saved from all severity
by a sad, wry eye
And when ‘twas time to die
God chisel hammer-honed him down
to His image and likeness
called his name and freed him from the plinth.
by Christy Kenneally
© Seamus Murphy #seamusmurphy @murphyseamus3 https://www.instagram.com/p/B96z50-KaaA/?igshid=mzgzt0oxiaj0
The Hollow of the Hand http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/the-hollow-of-the-hand-9781408865286 https://vimeo.com/184787689 https://youtu.be/V5s6pIFdMYs http://librodescargar.canadianwriterssociety.com/gratis/1408865289-the-hollow-of-the-hand.html #PJHarvey #SeamusMurphy #YouNeverLeftMyMind #Goodnight https://www.instagram.com/p/BqTazAsApOr2sv5cwfptD8GSFWG0uVMo-F4ebM0/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=smwt0oowl6gp
#seamusmurphy #theshortcut #mindstreamworld
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