Home Lifestyle Art Irish sculpture on display in Florence alongside masterpieces

Irish sculpture on display in Florence alongside masterpieces

A sculpture of a mother breastfeeding her baby will be the first Irish contemporary work acquired by one of the great museums in Florence, Italy.

Paddy Campbell’s Mother and Child sculpture in its new home in the Museo degli Innocenti in Florence, Italy.

Its sculptor Paddy Campbell is a former owner of Dublin’s Bewley’s Cafe.

The sculpture Mother and Child depicts Mr Campbell’s family friend Emily Dawson nursing her newborn daughter Coco 17 years ago.

The work will be inaugurated at Italy’s Museo degli Innocenti.

Mr Campbell began work on the sculpture in Dublin in 2005.

“This is a tremendous honour and so fitting for the beautiful story of Emily and Coco as the Innocenti museum is unique in exhibiting works of art relating to children,” said Mr Campbell.

“It is part of the oldest public institution in Italy, originally a convento, which had been devoted to the hospitality and protection of children and their rights for six centuries.”

Emily and 17-year-old Coco travelled to Florence to see the sculpture.

Emily said: “Coco and I are immensely proud of this collaboration. Paddy captured our love and eternal bond that words cannot convey.

“A dear family friend, Paddy had asked me while I was pregnant if I would be willing to sit for the sculpture once Coco was born.

Artist Paddy Campbell with family friends, Coco and Emily Dawson at the Museo degli Innocenti in Florence where his Mother and Child sculpture is homed. The sculpture of a mother breastfeeding her baby will be the first Irish contemporary work acquired by one of the great museums in Florence.

“Coco was just five weeks old when we sat on a makeshift wooden revolving stand as Paddy moulded us over the course of six weeks into a life-size wax model.

“My newborn and I sat bare, she didn’t know any different, kept comforted by the warm milk from my breast and skin-to-skin contact.

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“We were warmed by a small gas fire, hot tea and conversations on life, love and loss in a small studio above a garage in Fairview.”

Mr Campbell cast his Mother and Child sculpture in various materials, which culminated in the Carrara marble version carved by Dario Tazzioli.

This is now installed on permanent display at the Museo degli Innocenti alongside works by artists such as della Robbia, Botticelli and Ghirlandaio.

The former orphanage turned museum also houses Unicef’s research centre for child wellbeing, which carries out work into the importance of breastfeeding, among other issues.

Mr Campbell’s book about the sculpture, Mother and Child – A Secret Hidden In Stone, will be launched in Bewley’s Cafe on Grafton Street this Thursday (6 October). The book costs €20 euro, proceeds will go to Unicef to help children at risk of famine.

“This is a tremendous honour and so fitting for the beautiful story of Emily and Coco.”

Unicef Ireland executive director Peter Power said the charity was grateful for Mr Campbell’s support.

“It is fitting that Paddy’s touching depiction of Mother and Child will find its home in the same institution in Florence as Unicef’s global research teams,” he said.

“For more than six centuries, this historic building has been devoted to the protection of vulnerable children. And now, the support generated by Paddy’s work will help to further Unicef’s mission to safeguard the rights of every child.”

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