The Chapel of the Sacred Heart is a
neo-gothicchapel in
Dingle,
County Kerry, Ireland. Attached to Saint Mary's Catholic Church,[1] on Green Street in the center of the town, it was built for a local
enclosed order of
Presentation Sisters, by the architect C. J. McCarthy in 1886. The original building consisted of a short and narrow
nave, flanked by
choir stalls, leading to an altar and three stained glass
bay windows.
The chapel underwent major refurbishment in the early 1920s, during the tenure of the order's
Mother Superior Ita Macken.[2] Under guidance from the Irish architect and architectural historian
Rudolf M. Butler, Macken commissioned the Irish artist
Harry Clarke to produce six double lancet
stained glass windows for the chapel. They were completed and installed in 1924, with three of the colorful and highly detailed windows situated on either side of the nave. The
lancets depict scenes from the
life of Christ. Clarke was at the time a leading figure in the
Arts and Crafts movement and was paid a fee of £1,000 for the works.
Today it is under the ownership of Díseart Centre of Irish Spirituality and Culture (Irish: Ionad Spioradáltachta agus Cultúir Ghaelaigh). As Clarke later became an internationally renowned artist, the chapel is a significant local tourist attraction.[3]
Choir stalls and
stations of the cross line each side of the short and narrow
nave. The choir arches are made from
Spanish oak. In the 19th century, the nuns would each have had a set place in the chapel, with, according to Díseart, the "novices [sitting on hinged seats] closest to the altar, while the Mother Superior and the
Mistress of Novices were seated on either side of the entrance".[3]
The seats are hinged as the nuns would have alternately sat or stood during
call and response chants. Díseart explains how "the...seats lifted up as the nuns rose for those parts of the Liturgy where they were required to stand; underneath each seat is a protruding ledge, specifically for the elderly Sisters to rest on while still appearing to stand".[3]
The chapel is located on the third floor of the convent building on the grounds of Saint Mary's Catholic Church. The building also contains a
buon fresco of the
Last Supper, designed by Ella Yates, in the
refectory (dining room),[5][6] a series of
icons of Irish saints, and a room of murals commemorating the life of
Nano Nagle, the
Cork nun who founded the Presentation Order in 1775.[7]
Generations of Saint Mary's Presentation nuns are buried in a small, compact and linearly arranged graveyard outside the chapel.
Harry Clarke windows
In June 1922, Sister Ita Macken, in consultation with Butler, commissioned the then up and coming
Harry Clarke to design and install six double-
lancet or "light", stained glass windows, at an agreed fee of £1,000. Clarke completed the
cartoons in February 1924,[8] and was closely involved in the window's production, overseeing members of his studio (employee's of Harry's father, Joshua's studio "J. Clarke & Sons", which from 1930 became "Harry Clarke Stained Glass Ltd").[9][10] The artist Philip Deegan was particularly involved in their execution.[11]
The windows were completed and installed in the chapel in March 1924. Shortly after, Clarke wrote to Macken, recounting "the pleasure of hearing from Mr Butler to the effect that he has visited Dingle, and that the windows are in every effect satisfactory."[8]
The Baptism of Jesus (detail)
Let the little children come to Me (detail)
The Agony in the Garden
The six double lancet windows each show a scene from the life of Christ.[12]
The Visit of the Magi - This
diptych begins with an angel positioned over Jesus. The second lancet, or light, shows
Mary wearing a blue cloak, with
Christ Child straggling her lap.[13]
The Baptism of Jesus - His baptism at the
river Jordan was witnessed three angels.[14]
Let the little children come to me - Mary holds an infant in long
swaddling clothes in the first lancet, as two disciples stand behind her. In the second, Jesus sits among a group of children.[15]
The Sermon on the Mount - The upper glass panels of the first lancet show six disciples attending Jesus' most celebrated
teachings as recounted in the
Gospel of Matthew.[16] In the second, Jesus speaks to a crowd from an elevated mound, where he is attended by two disciples.[17]
The Agony in the Garden - The first light shows an angel watching over Jesus. The second shows Jesus' anguish on the
Mount of Olives on the night before his crucifixion. A disciple sleeps on a bed of flowers beside him.[18]
Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene - The cliffs above
Mary Magdalene contain a town and a detailed view of women in silver and gold
cloaks walking across
cobblestones.[19]
^Deegan was born in
Worthing, England, and worked with, and in the style of, Clarke from September 1921. See Gordon Bowe (1998), p. 23, and Griffith (2018), pp. 188 & 313
Gordon Bowe, Nicola. A Monograph and Catalogue Published to Coincide with the Exhibition "Harry Clarke", 12 November to 8 December 1979 at the Douglas Hyde Gallery. Dublin:
Douglas Hyde Gallery,
Trinity College, 1979
Costigan, Lucy; Cullen, Michael. Strangest Genius: The Stained Glass of Harry Clarke. The History Press, 2010.
ISBN978-1-8458-8971-5
Gordon Bowe, Nicola. "The works of Harry Clarke and the artists of An Túr Gloine (The Tower of Glass) 1903-1963". Gazetteer of Irish stained glass, Irish Academic Press, 1988
Griffith, Angela; Helmers, Marguerite; Kennedy, Róisín (eds). Harry Clarke and Artistic Visions of the New Irish State. Irish Academic Press, 2018.
ISBN978-1-7885-5045-1
Yeats, Eleanor. Nano's Pilgrim Artist: A Creative Celebration of Venerable Nano Nagle Founder of the Presentation Sisters. Red Hen Publishing, 2015.
ISBN978-0-9927-4876-0