Now Awful Beauty Puts on All Its Arms – H. Clarke
Now Awful Beauty Puts on All Its Arms – H. Clarke
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You've walked past stained glass in a Dublin church and felt something ancient reach toward you—Harry Clarke made that feeling permanent.
Now Awful Beauty Puts on All Its Arms
This 1913 ink drawing drips with Gothic intensity, Clarke's hand moving across the page with obsessive precision to conjure a world half-seen and wholly unsettling. The title pulls from Yeats, that collision of beauty and dread that defined Clarke's vision. Hang this and bring home the dark Irish imagination that shaped a century of art.
About the Artist
Harry Clarke (1889–1931) was Dublin-born, trained as a stained-glass artist, and became an illustrator whose pen work bordered on the supernatural. His drawings felt like fever dreams rendered in india ink—intricate, baroque, obsessed with shadow and line. Clarke spent years in London and Switzerland but remained rooted in Irish literary tradition, illustrating Yeats and Poe with equal devotion. He died young, leaving behind work that still makes people uncomfortable in the best way.
Why This Print?
- Original drawing held by the National Gallery of Ireland
- Clarke's most iconic works capture an Irish darkness that predates modern horror by decades
- For anyone who recognises themselves in Yeats, in old Dublin, in the beauty that frightens
Collector's Edition Quality
- Archival giclee inks — gallery-grade, fade-resistant, built to last a lifetime
- Heavyweight museum paper — off-white, uncoated, with exceptional colour depth
- FSC-certified frames — oak, ash or black hardwood, ready to hang
- Colour-verified against the original for accuracy
- 30-day quality guarantee
Shipping
Free worldwide shipping from Ireland. Tracked, securely packaged, delivered in 2-5 business days.
