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Joy's delight at exhibition coming 'home' 01.07.08

THE wife of the late architect Liam McCormick has said her husband would be very happy a major exhibition of his life's work was coming 'home' to Donegal.
'North by North West' will take place at the Regional Cultural Centre in Letterkenny from July 12 until the end of August.
Nobel laureate John Hume, a good friend of the late architect, will again perform the official opening of the exhibition as he did for the Dublin launch in April.
"As an Inishowen man, Liam would have been so pleased that the exhibition of his life's work will be seen by the people of his own county. That would have been very important to him," Joy said yesterday.

Liam McCormick's famous St. Aengus Chapel, Burt. Meanwhile, 'North by North West', the book, is a 300-page tome co-written by awarding winning architect and critic, Shane O'Toole from Dublin and Paul Larmour, Northern Ireland's leading architectural historian and Reader at Queen's University Belfast.
The exhibition and accompanying book both chronicle the work 
of the man described as the "father of modern church architecture in Ireland". Born in Derry in 1916 to a political and seafaring family, McCormick grew up in his beloved Greencastle. He was one of only a handful of Irish architects to attract an international reputation. During his long career he built more 30 churches including his most iconic, St Aengus Church at Burt. He also designed residential properties including a seaside retreat for John Hume and his family.
As part of the Donegal launch, Shane O'Toole will host a seminar kicking off at 2pm on July 12. The exhibition will be unveiled shortly after 5pm.
"Liam McCormick was a romantic at heart. He believed that architecture is an emotional art and he was not wrong about this. People respond emotionally to his buildings, which is the rarest and highest praise any architect can receive," said Shane O'Toole.
Paul Larmour adds: "Beginning in the 1950s, Liam McCormick's patronage of artists led to the creation of a whole new school of Irish church art and a flowering of native creativity and artistry that calls to mind in its focus and range both the golden age of early Christian art in Ireland and the heyday of the Irish Arts and Crafts Movement in the early 20th century."
People who attend the free exhibition will be treated to a wide range of material charting McCormick's life in Greencastle, his love of sailing and his time as the High Sheriff of Derry in 1970. He was only the second Catholic to hold the position since the Plantation of Ulster in the 17th Century. McCormick's office in The Diamond in Derry was firebombed in 1972 and almost all of his drawings and records were lost. This fact makes the new exhibition and book all the more significant.
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