
King William III, July 1690, crossing the Boyne on his white steed. Percy Place, Belfast.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 Peter Moloney
M00572

A line from Tone Is Coming Back Again, painted in Twinbrook in 1981: “Too long we’ve borne, with smouldering wrath, the cursed alien laws.” Tone’s profile is drawn on the tricolour in the middle.
unknown street (Twinbook), Belfast.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 Alan Gallery, All rights reserved
M00610
alan@alangallery.com



Here are two pieces by Republican News cartoonist “Cormac” (Brian Moore) reproduced in Springhill Avenue, Belfast by Mo Chara Kelly, one about the unavailability of the paper in a left-leaning London bookshop (because “violence is only acceptable if it doesn’t happen here”), the other showing the Union Flag crumbling and the Starry Plough rising from its ashes.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 Peter Moloney
M00606 M00607 M00605

“This is Nuada, king of the Tuatha Dé Danann.” The mural is based on the illustrations of Jim Fitzpatrick.
Painted by Mo Chara. The central figure comes from a painting of Jim Fitzpatrick‘s, ‘Nuada Journeys To The Underworld’.
Click here for Nuada And Loughgall together.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1987 Peter Moloney
M00603

Here is an image of the completed Loch gCál/Loughgall mural (see also the in-progress image from 1987) in memory of the eight IRA volunteers from the East Tyrone brigade who were killed in an SAS ambush during an attack on an RUC base in May, 1987 (WP).
Their names are given here in Irish and (partially) in the old script:
“I ndıl cuimh[n]e de [= ar]
Óglach Pádraıg Ó Ceallaıġ [Patrick Kelly],
Óglach Séamus Ó Donn[ġ]aıle [Seamus Donnelly],
Óglach Deaglán Mac Aırt [Declan Arthurs],
Óglach Séamus Laıghneach [Jim Lynagh],
Óglach Gearóıd Ó Ceallacháın [Gerry O’Callaghan],
Óglach Pádraıg Mac Cearnaıgh [Pádraıg McKearney],
Óglach Antóın Ó Garmaıle [Ó Gormghaıle | Tony Gormley],
Óglach Eoghan Ó Ceallaıġ [Eugene Kelly]
an ochtar óglach de óglaigh na hÉireann a dúnmharú ag Loch gCál ar an ochtú lá Bealtaine 1987.”
[the eight volunteers from the Irish Volunteers [IRA] who were murdered at Loughgall on the eighth day of May, 1987]
The town (Loughgall) and the four provinces are also named in Irish. An Easter lily is at the centre of the Celtic cross in the middle of the image, above a lark in barbed wire and a gal gréıne/sunburst.
Painted by Mo Chara. The bright colours and sweeping clouds/skyline are inspired by the work of Jim Fitzpatrick.
Springhill Avenue, west Belfast.
There is a list of the eight names, also in Irish, in the New Lodge, north Belfast.
Click here for Nuada And Loughgall together.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 Peter Moloney
M00604

Here is an image of the Nuada and Loughgall/Loch gCál murals together at the top of Springhill Avenue in west Belfast, painted by Mo Chara and inspired by the work of Jim Fitzpatrick.
For in-progress images see Loch gCál and Is É Seo Nuadha, Rí Tuatha Dé Danann. Also seen a year later, in 1989.
M00605
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 Peter Moloney
M00602

From inside the Felons Club in Andersonstown, Belfast: a version of Walter Paget’s Birth Of The Irish Republic above the famous quote from Pearse’s O’Donovan Rossa oration – “The fools, the fools, they have left us our Fenian dead, and while Ireland holds these graves, Ireland unfree shall never be at peace” — along with portraits of hunger strikers.
For a history of the club in its previous locations, see this Danny Morrison remembrance.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 Peter Moloney
M00601

1988 version of Beware Of A Risen People, in Summerhill Road, Belfast.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1988 LC
M00600