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McDaids Pub, Dublin - 385 by Chris McMorrow Click image to enlarge. * Where we have shown images of artwork framed or within room sets these have been created using virtual software and are intended to provide an idea of the style of framing and/or the scale of the artwork in relation to furniture. They should not be viewed as completely accurate to scale and the colours may vary. We can send photographs of the artwork in its frame by request.
The frame images used are digital and are similar to the real ones but not the exact same. However the sizes are correct.
  • Title:
  • McDaids Pub, Dublin - 385
  • Artist:
  • Chris McMorrow
  • Medium:
  • Limited Edition Print
  • Desc:
  • A painting of McDaids Pub, Harry Street, just off Grafton Street, Dublin. A down to earth bar that serves good Guinness and has no loud music and is one of the pubs on the literary trail having been a local for many Irish writers over the years. The complementary cool blues in this painting cause the glowing yellow and orange lights to jump out and become a focus of attention.

    McDaids was the favourite drinking spot of Irish literary legend Brendan Behan. Before it was a pub the building in which McDaids resides was the local morgue for Dublin City and was then later turned into a church before finally becoming a pub. J.P. Donleavy, the Irish American whose novel “The Ginger Man” was banned in both America and Ireland on grounds of obscenity, was a regular at McDaids. James Joyce’s short story “Grace” opens in McDaids.
  • Options:
  • Price:
  • €105