GPO & Nelson's Pillar Dublin — Art Print
GPO & Nelson's Pillar Dublin — Art Print
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Free Worldwide Shipping
- Ships in 2–5 Business Days
- Secure Checkout
The GPO and Nelson's Pillar, Sackville Street — Dublin as it once was.
This fine art print captures Sackville Street (today's O'Connell Street) at its 19th-century peak — a grand Georgian boulevard lined with carriages, figures going about their day, and two of Dublin's most storied landmarks standing side by side.
The building on the left needs no introduction. The General Post Office, completed in 1818, went on to become the command headquarters of the 1916 Easter Rising — the most defining moment in modern Irish history. Nearly a century earlier, when this image was made, it was simply Dublin's most impressive public building: a neoclassical statement of civic ambition on the city's finest street.
Beside it stands Nelson's Pillar — the towering column erected in 1809, a source of controversy for as long as it stood, and demolished in 1966. This print is one of the finest early records of how it looked at the height of its presence.
The artwork was drawn by Samuel Frederick Brocas (c.1792–1847) and engraved by Henry Brocas the Younger (c.1798–1873) — two of the most important recorders of early 19th-century Dublin. It is held in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Ireland.
Printed using high-resolution archival scanning on premium fine art paper, every detail of the original engraving — the fine linework, the depth of tone, the street life — is preserved at full quality.
- Source: National Gallery of Ireland Collection
- Artist: Samuel Frederick Brocas | Engraver: Henry Brocas the Younger
- Medium: Giclée reproduction on fine art paper
- Available in three sizes: 30×45 cm / 40×60 cm / 60×90 cm
- Free worldwide shipping | Ships in 2–5 business days
A rare glimpse of Dublin before the Rising, before the GPO burned, before Nelson's Pillar fell. For anyone who carries Ireland with them — this is a piece of the city worth keeping.
