Lord Street mural the ERII’s golden (50th) jubilee in 2002. The Beaconsfield Arms is on the left (perhaps the name of the Cock & Hens in 1952) and the previous Ledley Hall school (now Ledley Hall youth club) is on the right.
A 3-D/plane-breaking board/collage from the courtyard of the Duke Of York, featuring King Kong on the Empire State building (1933), Atlas (Metropolis 1927), a zombie (also from Metropolis?), riot police controlled by a puppet-master, Hokusai’s Great Wave Of Kanagawa 1830, WWI biplanes, a steamer/cruise-ship with searchlight? and something that looks like the Giant’s causeway?? (Leave a comment if you can correct these, or recognise the car with L plates (Death Proof 2007 – thanks Bob) or Hollister on the document folder.)
2013-02 Update: Artists Ciaran Gallagher and Kathryn Bannister have a gallery of pictures of the piece being constructed and installed. The piece, they say, is inspired by “classics of the silver screen” and was part of Culture Night 2011.
Detail of a mural commemorating the battle of the Somme in the courtyard of the Times Bar, York Road. The mural is probably based on the work of JP Beadle, such as the painting “Battle of the Somme: Attack of the Ulster Division”, which hangs in Belfast City Hall (militaryprints.com).
Union flags and a full range of Covenant clothing are available from the Union Jack Souvenir Shop on the Lower Newtownards Road. See also: The Essentials.
A mural by artist Deirdre Robb (of Creative Exchange Artists) in Tower Street/Newtownards Road of flax plants, somewhat reminiscent of van Gogh’s Irises. (Leave a comment if you detect another inspiration.) The official title is “Urban Meadows” (Robb).
The painting is on a tarp or canvas that is not firmly affixed to the wall, which allows the painting to move in the wind. The wall and the “pocket park” are on the site of the former RHC mural.
7 min. video of Deirdre talking about the pieces in her exhibit ‘Blue’
A plaque in Donegall St: “The harp festival of 1792 was held in the Assembly Rooms, on the upper floor of this building. It began life as a single-storey arcaded market house or ‘exchange’ in 1768. The upper floor was added in 1778 and Charles Lanyon Italianised the exterior in 1845. Known as the ‘four corners’, all milestones out of Belfast were once measured from here.”
The Assembly Rooms are in the building that stands between Lower Donegall St and Lower North Street.
Who are these two figures? The link above gives a list of harpists. Is the smaller person Edward Bunting (WP), who transcribed and “corrected” the music played? Who is KN (see below leg of chair) and is this a copy of another piece?
Wider shot below, complete with obliterated — by Belfast City Council — flyer and another for Dance Hall music.
McBride’s pub — in Cushendun — with a variety of local celebrities. This is one of the three images on the back wall of the courtyard of the Duke of York. The artist is Kathryn Bannister (not Ciaran Gallagher, as originally stated – thanks to Ciaran for the correction, April 2013. The pair worked together on the Fritz Lang and Euro-pa pieces, also at the Duke Of York). Kathryn’s web site is here.