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Pat Liddy

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Pat Liddy (Irish: Pádraig Ó Lideadha) was born in Dublin in 1944. Initially working for the Irish airline, Aer Lingus, Pat is best known today as an artist, historian, author, broadcaster, map maker, environmental lobbyist and walking tour operator of Pat Liddy's Walking Tours of Dublin.

Puzzle globe
Pat Liddy from March 2011

Pat Liddy

Born 3 August 1944, Sunnybank Nursing Home, Glasnevin, Dublin. Nationality Irish Education St Vincent’s, Glasnevin Occupation Aer Lingus 1963 -1994, Freelance artist, historian, author, broadcaster, map maker and lobbyist for the preservation & advancement of Dublin. Founded Pat Liddy’s Walking Tours of Dublin in 2005 Spouse Josephine Liddy Children Anne Marie, Pádraig & Brendan

Personal life

Pat Liddy was the only child of Brendan (born St Peter’s Road, Phibsborough) and Maureen (née, Mac Mahon) from Kilmainhamwood, Co Meath.Liddy grew up in the inner north city suburb of Phibsborough where he was fortunate to have as a playground the semi-rural surrounds of the Royal Canal, the nearby Botanical Gardens and the Victorian urban landscape which helped to fuel his artistic imagination and love of history.[1] Today, he still lives on the north side in the suburb of Artane. One of his main interests is in Early Music and in the late 90s and early 00s was a part-time manager of the music group The Capriol Consort, under director Professor Doris Keogh. Liddy was married in 1976 to Josephine Murphy (born Lyre, Co. Cork) and has three children; Anne Marie, Pádraig and Brendan.

Career

Always interested in art, Pat Liddy entered and won several art competitions as a teenager and young adult. One such endeavour, a balsa wood model of his imaginary concept for a then proposed Roman Catholic cathedral in Dublin, is today on view in the Tara’s Palace Museum of Childhood in Powerscourt House in Co. Wicklow.

Liddy had initially wanted to be an architect but disliked the way architecture was developing in the early 1960s, especially in his native Dublin, and decided instead to join the national airline, Aer Lingus, in April 1963. In this capacity, he took the opportunity of discounted travel to travel all over the world. These experiences only reinforced Liddy’s growing certainty that Dublin was one of the great but totally undervalued cities of Europe.[2]

Using his skills of self-taught architectural draftsmanship and general artistic ability, Liddy started to paint and draw scenes from the urban landscape[3] in an attempt to bring attention to the uniqueness and charm of Dublin before places disappeared forever. The 1970s was a time when a good deal of second-rate redevelopment was clearing away much of the run-down but historic fabric of the city in the name of, as he saw it, so-called progress.

Starting in 1982 and running until 1989, Liddy’s weekly column in The Irish Times, called Dublin Today, featured a pen and ink sketch of a building or place of interest in the city and was accompanied by a description of around 400 words.[4] This long-running series gained a huge following and played an important part in a new-found determination among ordinary people, businesses, property owners and Dublin City Council to rediscover and enhance the city.[5]

Liddy’s first book, Dublin Today, published in 1984, arose directly from The Irish Times series. Several more books followed including the popular flagship book, Dublin be Proud, published during the Dublin Millennium of 1988. It had the unusual distinction of being a No. 1 non-fiction bestseller simultaneously in paperback and hardback.

When the famous Irish traditional music group, The Chieftains, went on a ground-breaking trip to China in 1983 and held many concerts there, Pat Liddy accompanied them and wrote articles on the visit to The Irish Times and The Cork Examiner and on his return held an exhibition of watercolours based on the trip in the renowned Chester Beatty Library.

On behalf of the Irish American Cultural Institute and Aer Lingus he undertook in 1988 a 22-city tour of the USA promoting Dublin’s historical and cultural attractions.

Taking early retirement from Aer Lingus in 1994 Liddy now turned his attention full-time to painting, drawing, exploring and writing about the historic buildings, scenic places and exciting new developments in his native city. He combined these skills with his active promotion, both at home and abroad, for the appreciation and protection of what he believed was the unique cultural and architectural heritage of Dublin.[6] He featured in many TV programmes and TV series, among others a very popular RTÉ One series On the Street Where You Live (broadcast in 2009).

In the early 1990s Liddy was a member of a group that researched and successfully lobbied the Irish Government for the introduction of a light rail system into Dublin, now known as the Luas. One offshoot from his local historical knowledge was the invitation on several occasions to name streets and roads in new housing developments.

The most widely distributed tourist map of Dublin, The Dublin Visitor Map (13 million copies to date),[7] was designed by Liddy in 1999 (in conjunction with the Dublin City Business Association) and is annually updated by him.

Turning his hand to sculptural design, Liddy designed the Mass Rock Memorial in the village of Lyre, County Cork in the year 2000 (Mass rocks were substitute altars in rural Ireland during times when the Roman Catholic Church and its services were banned by the authorities from the 16th to the 18th centuries).

The annual Dublin Moon Walk, a charity mid-summer all-night walk, with a different route each year, is designed by Liddy in association with the Diabetes Association of Ireland.

Founded in 2005, Pat Liddy’s Walking Tours of Dublin, is now one of the city’s largest multi-lingual walking tour guiding companies with a group of professional dedicated guides.[8] The walks designed by Liddy show the highlights and hidden gems of Dublin city[9] Since 2008 Liddy has also led an annual series of free cultural walks around Dublin organised by the Dublin City Council in which hundreds of people participate in each walk.

In May 2011, Liddy received the Lord Mayor’s Award [10] in recognition of his dedication to raising awareness of Dublin’s architectural and cultural heritage. In the same year, he had the honour of introducing some of Dublin educational and charity organisation dignitaries to Queen Elizabeth of England during her historic visit to Ireland.

Publications (text and illustrations)

  • The Irish Times, weekly column 1982-1989
  • Album cover photographs of The Chieftains in China,[11] 1985
  • Dublin Today, 1985
  • Dublin be Proud, 1987
  • Dublin Stolen From Time, 1990
  • 50 Years A Growin’, The Story of Maryfield College. 1995
  • Walking Dublin, 1998 & 200
  • Dublin A Celebration, 2000
  • Secret Dublin, 2001
  • The Story of Coolock Artane Credit Union, 2001
  • Ongar, In the Ancient Barony of Castleknock, 2001
  • The Changing Landscapes of Dublin, 2003
  • Serving Our Community 1965-2005, Coolock Artane Credit Union, 2005

Electronic media

  • Newstalk Radio Series Dublin Today
  • Various RTÉ documentaries and current affairs programmes
  • Regular interviews on national and regional radio stations
  • Tourist documentaries on radio and TV for overseas companies from countries such as Canada, the USA, Korea, the UK, Germany, Netherlands, Australia, France, Norway, Spain and Israel among others.
  • Dublin Tourism Podcast I-Walks 2009
  • Fáilte Ireland Podcast I-Walks 2013

Exhibitions

  • Chester Beatty Library, Watercolours & Photographs of China, 1983
  • Arnott’s Department Store Gallery, Dublin in Drawings & Watercolours, 1984 & 1988
  • UBS Gallery, Zurich, The Dublin & Zurich Homes of James Joyce, 1989
  • Brussels, Dublin in paintings, 1989
  • Dublin Civic Museum, Malton to Liddy, 1991(collection now held in the Dublin City Council archives)
  • Bank of Ireland Art Centre, The Castles of Dublin & its Pale, 2005
  • Dublin City Hall, The Changing Landscapes of Dublin, 2004[12]

Awards and distinctions

  • Winner (model section) Caltex Art Competition 1961 & 1962
  • Honorary Citizen, San Jose, California, 1988
  • Co-leader of the St Patrick’s Day parade, St Louis, Missouri, 1988
  • Ford Cultural Award 1991
  • Special editions of Dublin A Celebration were the Irish Government’s gift to the heads of state and senior ministers of the other European Union’s countries to celebrate the accession of the new states in 2004
  • The Irish Times Living Dublin Award, 2006
  • Category winner in the Digital Media Ireland Awards 2008
  • Dublin Lord Mayor’s Award 2011[13]

References

  1. ^ Behling, Kat. "Irish Fireside December 2006".
  2. ^ Finn, Clodagh. "Irish Independent".
  3. ^ "Oisin Gallery".
  4. ^ Oram, Hugh (2004). "An Irishman's Diary". The Irish Times. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. ^ "Dubliner's Pride and Joy". The Irish Times. 03 Oct 1987. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ "Dublinks.com".
  7. ^ "Dublin City Association Visitor Map".
  8. ^ Finn, Clodagh. "Dublin -- a new city afoot". Irish Independent. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  9. ^ Sommerville, Christopher. "Walk of the Week: Pat Liddy's Dublin". Irish Independent.
  10. ^ "Lord Mayor Award". The Irish Times. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  11. ^ "The Chieftains in China".
  12. ^ "National Irish Visual Artst Library".
  13. ^ "Lord Mayor Award". The Irish Times.