The Lion, The Witch, And The Wardrobe

Here are three close-ups from the mural CS Lewis’s book The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe in Convention Court, east Belfast. (For the whole, see M02946.)

This mural replaced the mural putting the Red Branch Knights and the Red Hand Commando in parallel – see the Visual History page on Cú Chulaınn.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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Sınn Féın Trade Union Dept

Fifteen years after painting, the Rockmount Street mural of Connolly and Liberty Hall is showing its age. Previously seen in 2006.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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Betting Sports

Sporting mural on the side of Sean Graham’s bookmakers. Ireland’s leading goal-scorer Robbie Keane is on the left. Cú Chulaınn plays hurling in the centre. (See also the mural on Casement Park M05144.) The boxer on the right is John Caldwell, a champion from the 1950s and 1960s from Cyprus Street (WP). Painted by a Short Strand artist at the junction of Whiterock and Falls roads.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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Welcome To The New Lodge

This is an end-of-life shot of the mural at the pedestrian entrance to the New Lodge. In the front is a landscape scene with “Welcome” in different languages; in the rear are street art figures and signatures; but graffiti covers all.

(Update: It was replaced in 2014 – both front and rear – by ‘old New Lodge’ images.)

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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Free The POWs

2011 image of the historical republican POW mural in Ludlow Square, New Lodge, Belfast, seen previously in 1997 and 2010.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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William Drennan

The William Drennan mural in the New Lodge is still hanging on, fourteen years after it was painted. See M01349.

Ludlow Square, New Lodge, north Belfast.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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New Lodge 2000

This is a companion piece to New Lodge 1900s. Life is now lived in colour, but suffers from underemployment, alcoholism, and suicide. The German bomber has been replaced by a British Army helicopter.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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New Lodge 1900s

The trials of life in the 1900s are depicted in this New Lodge mural. People work and die in the mills. The Germans drop bombs. Children go barefoot. The black-and-white colouring adds to the depression. The ‘New Lodge 2000‘ mural further down the road is in full colour, though life is still beset with problems.

For the mural on the low wall, see The Right To Be Happy (with republican slogan) and Young People’s Rights.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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Civil And Religious Liberty For All

The ‘Civil and religious liberty for all’ mural in Cambrai street was ‘in progress’ for a long time. These images are from October 20th (first two) and November 7th (last two), 2011. The mural, showing parades, bonfires, and Northern Ireland football, would eventually be completed in 2012 – see M08228.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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UFF 1973

This sequence of UDA/UFF murals are in Island Street, east Belfast: above, the UFF fist with the date of the organisation’s creation; [missing next is a UDA crest – see M02341;] below, the emblem of the UYM, the youth division; last, 2nd battalion memorial.

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Copyright © 2011 Seosamh Mac Coılle
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