The Niland Collection
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The Model, home of the Niland Collection, formerly called Model Arts and Niland Gallery, is a contemporary arts centre and gallery space in
Sligo Sligo ( ; ga, Sligeach , meaning 'abounding in shells') is a coastal seaport and the county town of County Sligo, Ireland, within the western province of Connacht. With a population of approximately 20,000 in 2016, it is the List of urban areas ...
, Ireland. The gallery houses several exhibition spaces focusing on contemporary art and education activities, a cinema/venue for concerts, an artist-in-residence programme, and a collection of 20th-century Irish art called the Niland Collection. This collection is named for the former Sligo County librarian,
Nora Niland Nora Niland (26 March 1913 – 29 December 1988) was the County Librarian of Sligo and the founder of the Sligo municipal art collection. Niland was born in 1913, the eighth child of the six sons and three daughters of John Niland and Elizab ...
.


Building


Use as school

Located on the Mall in Sligo town, north of the Garavogue river, The Model was designed by architect James Owen for the then Board of Works. It is a detached multiple-bay, two-storey rubble and ashlar stone building in the Italianate Palazzo style. The original building was a purpose-built school, constructed in 1862, by local contractors Messrs Patrick Keighron & Son at a cost of £8000. These schools were known as "model" schools as they were to function as the template for primary schools throughout the country. Originally intended to be multi-denominational, the school became predominantly Protestant with the religious control of schools being the norm under the new Free State. The school provided primary education up to the age of 12. In the 1970s, the building was abandoned with the building of a new primary school across the road. In the early 1990s it was acquired by Sligo County Council with the intention of providing a museum.


Refurbishment as museum and extensions

The building was refurbished and extended in 2000/2001 for use as a museum. The project was designed by McCullough Mulvin Architects. This extension was shortlisted for several architectural awards. The Model was redeveloped for a second time between 2008 and 2010. This project was part of Sligo County Council's vision to create a Cultural Quarter for Sligo Town. This extension increased the building by a third in size. The extension provided artist studios, a purpose-built performance space and a new entrance from the north. The extension also created a complete gallery circuit for the visitor, a new reception area, bookstore and cafe. Works commenced in January 2008 and the Model reopened on 1 May 2010. Funding for the redevelopment included a grant of €2.4 million which was provided by the BMW Regional Assembly under an ERDF grant scheme for designated Gateways and Hub Towns. The Model:Niland project was the largest beneficiary in the BMW Region under the grant scheme. A further grant of 1.75 million euro was received from Access 2 funding under the Arts Council. Sligo Borough Council provided 600,000 euro in 2009. The €2.9 million grant, minus 600,000 already spent on groundworks for Sligo museum was switched to the Model Arts project in late 2008. A further 118,554 was granted in 2010 under the cultural development fund of the Arts Council. Sligo County Council spent 2.15 million on the Model Arts Centre project up to 2010. In all, €6.4 million was borrowed by Sligo County Council in relation to a new Cultural Quarter for Sligo Town up to December 2010.


Niland Collection

The Niland Collection is named after former Sligo County librarian
Nora Niland Nora Niland (26 March 1913 – 29 December 1988) was the County Librarian of Sligo and the founder of the Sligo municipal art collection. Niland was born in 1913, the eighth child of the six sons and three daughters of John Niland and Elizab ...
who began the collection in the 1950s. It contains over 300 works, including pieces by Paul Henry, Louis le Brocquy, Estella Solomons, George Russell and
Jack Butler Yeats Jack Butler Yeats RHA (29 August 1871 – 28 March 1957) was an Irish art The history of Irish art starts around 3200 BC with Neolithic stone carvings at the Newgrange megalithic tomb, part of the Brú na Bóinne complex which still stands ...
. The Niland Collections contains one of the most significant collections of Yeats work in Ireland, many of which record experiences and memories of his time living in Sligo and its environs. The collection was begun by Nora Niland borrowing five works by Yeats to exhibit for the duration of the first Yeats Summer School in 1959. These works consisted of three large oil paintings, ''Communicating with Prisoners'', ''The Funeral of Harry Boland'' and ''The Island Funeral'', along with two smaller watercolours, ''Market Day'' and ''The Star Gazer''.


Operation and programmes

As of 2021, the museum is run by its Artistic Director / CEO, Emer McGarry, with support from administrative, educational, and other staff. The Model is primarily a centre for the contemporary arts, led by visual art, and the museum has presented exhibitions with many of the world's leading artists. The Model also has a music programme which includes a mix of contemporary and classical performances. The Model develops music projects that respond to the exhibition programme. The Model's international film programme is presented in partnership with Sligo Film Society. Former artists in residence include Nasan Tur, Yorgos Sapountzis, Elizabeth Price, Barbara Breitenfellner, and Caoimhin O'Raghallaigh. The Model also has eight artist studios rented by locally based artists. Previous notable exhibitions at The Model have included shows which included works by Patti Smith, Gerard Byrne and Andy Warhol.


Notable events

On 20 May 2015 the English royal, Prince Charles made a speech at The Model during a visit to promote reconciliation to the scene of Lord Mountbatten's death by an IRA bomb in 1979 at Mullaghmore, County Sligo.


Controversies

In 2009, controversy arose over the renaming of the centre. It was announced in June by director Seamus Kealy that the Model Arts and Niland Gallery was to be renamed as "The Model, home of The Niland Collection". Former President of the Yeats Summer School, Michael Keohane called the renaming a "public disgrace". The renaming was also called "absurd" by Bruce Arnold in an opinion piece in the ''Irish Independent'' in August 2009. In 2010, controversial chef
Conrad Gallagher Conrad Gallagher (born 12 March 1971) is an Irish-born chef/restaurateur from Letterkenny, County Donegal, based in Dubai since 2016. He was the youngest chef ever awarded a Michelin star at the time, for Peacock Alley in Dublin, at the age of 2 ...
opened a fine dining restaurant in the Model. By June 2011, the restaurant had moved to Sligo town centre. In July 2011, Irish Revenue commissioners ordered Gallagher to wind up his operations in Dublin and Sligo; neither had submitted accounts since incorporation the previous year and Gallagher was not listed as a director in either business.


References


External links

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{{Coord, 54.2737, -8.4628, region:IE_type:landmark, display=title Sligo (town) Art museums and galleries in the Republic of Ireland Buildings and structures in County Sligo Arts centres in the Republic of Ireland