WHYTE'S IRISH & INTERNATIONAL ART MONDAY 26 SEPTEMBER 2022

126 93 Rory Breslin (b.1963) THE GUINNESS MASK bronze with stainless steel; (no. 3 from an edition of 5) signed and numbered 29.25 by 15.75 by 7in. (74.3 by 40 by 17.8cm) The Guinness Mask is an interpretation of the keystone head on the historic St. James Gate entrance to the Guinness brewery in Dublin. This enigmatic portrait of a youthful and confident woman, whose intensive gaze evinces a determined character, is framed by waves of the ears of barley, and hops symbolic of the making of ale. Probably a depiction of the agricultural deity Ceres or its Greek equivalent Demeter, this rendition appears to depict the artist’s personification of Georgian beauty. The head diverges from a Classical sculptural rendering of the subject to what seems to be the artist’s sensitive use of the features of perhaps a member of the Guinness family or someone close to him. When Arthur Guinness initially leased St. James Gate in 1759, he brewed ale. It was another ten years, on the 19th May 1769 before he exported his stout to England for the first time. The St. James arch was built adjacent to the site of the original St. James Gate, the city’s western Customs House which lay just outside the medieval city of Dublin and was demolished in 1734. This gate’s keystone was said to have represented either St. James; Ceres (the Goddess of Corn) or Bacchus (the Greek God of Wine and Merriment). The site was traditionally the start of a pilgrimage to Compostela and pilgrims from all over Ireland used to gather on this site to start the journey to Spain. €5,000-€7,000 (£4,310-£6,030 approx.) Click here for more images and to bid on this lot93

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