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  • The Tuam Herald 'The last supper - in modern dress'

    "Local landmark inspired unique church painting"

  • Irish Times 'Whistlers mother inspires artists' Michael Parsons

    "Among the paintings on show and on sale is 'Deep in thought', a portrait of her mother by German-born Dublin based artist Ursula Klinger who says her painting involves 'of showing what is unsaleable about the human condition in its fragility'"

  • Irish Independent Oct 2007 Article by Sophie Gorman

    "There is almost something apocalyptic with a surreal hint of Dali about this image of a solitary strappy stiletto.... These new oil paintings suggest potency and power - and possible sore but satisfied feet."

  • Irish Times 'Art for Mother's Day'

    Art for Mother’s Day
    ‘Whistler’s Mother’ inspires Dublin exhibition of paintings
    Deep in Thought, a portrait of her mother by German-born, Dublin-based artist Ursula Klinger at The Dublin Painting & Sketching Club, €3,800.
    Michael Parsons
    Sat, Mar 29, 2014, 01:00
    A painting of a mother – now one of the world’s most famous such images – was shown to Irish audiences 130 years ago when it was exhibited in Dublin.
    In 1884, the Dublin Painting & Sketching Club invited James McNeill Whistler to exhibit at its annual exhibition. Whistler (1834-1903) was an American painter based in London. He brought 25 paintings to show in Dublin including the grimly titled Arrangement in Grey and Black No 1 . The painting depicts a seated, elderly woman who was the artist’s mother, Anna McNeill Whistler, who was living with her son in London and had, apparently, sat for the painting when a model failed to turn up for an appointment at the studio.
    A member of the Club wrote to The Irish Times complaining that space for local artists’ work had been “sacrificed to make room for Mr Whistler’s unintelligible productions”.
    The painting drew only a lukewarm response from critics, as it had during an earlier showing at London’s Royal Academy. A despondent Whistler later pawned the painting which was eventually acquired, six years later, by a museum in Paris.
    Now popularly known as Whistler’s Mother , it hangs in the Musée d’Orsay in Paris; is considered priceless, and is one of the most famous and popular depictions of a mother in secular art.
    It is widely regarded as the most famous American painting outside the US and has been described as America’s Mona Lisa . It was used on a US postage stamp in 1934 “In Memory And In Honor Of The Mothers Of America”.
    The Dublin Painting & Sketching Club is still going strong and its 2014 exhibition features a number of paintings specially created either in homage to, or reflecting the work of, Whistler and some reproductions of the works he exhibited in 1884, including Whistler’s Mother’.