Category Archives: Operations

Irish galleries please copy

I have often lamented the poor classification methods used by those who look after collections of paintings. They focus on the name of the painter, the date and the school to which he or she belonged, rather than on the really important facts: whether or not a painting shows a steamer, barge, canal or other object of industrial heritage interest. Thus, as I pointed out here, you get titles like “View looking down on a jetty and boats on a lake with a church in the distance” that ignore the most important aspect: that the pic shows a steamer on Lough Erne.

The other problem is that the paintings are in galleries scattered hither and yon, which means that a serious search for steamers, barges and canals would require hours of driving followed by hours of rummaging through archives, even though each pic would require only a few seconds’ attention to determine whether or not it is worthy of notice. The cost-benefit ratio is all wrong, but the use of technology can solve the problem.

I was delighted therefore to learn that, in HM Realm, the BBC and the Public Catalogue Foundation have put online tagged images of [almost] all the 200,000+ oil paintings in public ownership in the UK at the Your Paintings site. The collection is searchable: the search will return artists, painting titles and tags. And you can help by adding tags, if you have more information about a painting.

There is not much of Irish waterways interest, which is scarcely surprising, but there is an interesting illustration of the use of a pole on the Lagan [I’d welcome comment on what’s happening in that pic] and the barge at Edenderry. There is also some material for steam men.

It would be nice if Irish galleries would now do the same. The cost could be met by selling off the originals, which would no longer be necessary, and closing the galleries, at a saving to the public purse.

No Heritage Council grants this year

Heritage Council Grant Programme Suspended for 2013:

In 2012 the Heritage Council was in a position to allocate €1.4 million to 273 public projects across Ireland supporting jobs and improving the quality of our tourism product now and for the long term. Regrettably, due to additional budget cuts from the Dept. of Arts, Heritage & the Gaeltacht for 2013, the Heritage Council will not be in a position to advertise grants for the coming year. This is the first time since the Heritage Council was established in 1997 that it will be unable to allocate funding for the wider heritage sector and we will be working to see that this situation is reversed for 2014.

Core aspects of our national heritage infrastructure, including the Heritage Officer Programme, the Irish Walled Towns Network (IWTN), the Irish Landmark Trust, and the National Biodiversity Data Centre (NBDC) will continue to receive some level of support. Funding for the 2012/13 REPS4 Traditional Farm Buildings Grant Scheme, which is funded by the Dept. of Argiculture, Food & the Marine will not been affected.

The Council had conducted a strenuous and successful campaign to ensure its own survival, as I noted back in November.

WI extended mooring applications Batches 2 and 3

I reported on 28 November 2012 that Waterways Ireland had issued a press release about the second batch of locations to which extended mooring permits (EMPs) would apply. WI has a new notice about it today; the notice also outlines the third batch of locations, which will …

…  include locations in Kildare on the Barrow Navigation and Royal Canals at Monasterevin, Skirteen, Obstertown and Moyvalley. In addition Ballingowan Glebe and Ballyshane in Co Offaly on the Grand Canal are open for applications. In Westmeath, Coolnahay is also opening on the 17th December.

Lockkeeper job

I wrote recently about Jack Wall TD‘s Dáil questions about lockkeepers. WI now has a vacancy for a lockkeeper — in Coleraine.

I wonder whether fluency in Ulster Scots would be an advantage.

WI income

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

Operating income, which was pathetically small in 2010, was pathetically smaller in 2011.

WI programme costs

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

Note that programme costs do not include staff costs, as the income and expenditure account for y/e 31 December 2011 makes clear.

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

The most startling thing in the programme costs is that Shannon costs have increased 57% while Grand Canal costs have decreased by 25%. I presume that the change is in the Civil Construction/Supply contract costs, as the other items don’t seem to have enough scope for such large changes. It would be interesting to know what the contracts were. The accounts of Grand Canal improvements on pages 12 and 16 don’t suggest any diminution in activity, although they are not specific enough to be definitive; the account for the Shannon on page 17 mention some new undertakings, of which the most significant was perhaps the new mooring at Killaloe, whereof the Chief Executive said in the Foreword:

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

And so, I’m sure, say all of us.

But wouldn’t that be a capital cost? I can’t work out how the income and expenditure figures link to the activities covered in the descriptions of achievements.

WI’s shy leaders

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

WI staffing

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

WI revaluations

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011

WI and NAMA

From WI's annual report for 2011

From WI’s annual report for 2011