Artist to design commemorative piece on Kerry women during revolutionary times

Ms O’Kane is an award-winning artist whose works are located at Leinster House, the European Parliament, Irish embassies in Washington DC, London, and in public spaces.

She was selected following a tendering process by Kerry County Council (KCC) who is seeking to develop an appropriate artwork to commemorate the women of Kerry during the revolutionary period.

This art commission by Kerry County Council, was tabled by five female elected members through a notice of motion to commemorate the role women during the struggle for Irish freedom between 1912 and 1923. The notice of motion acknowledged that women in Kerry contributed to the changes that shaped a new Ireland.

The brief the artists responded to asked them to be cognisant of the impact that events of the time had on women in Kerry. Many were actively involved in the revolution, and many more were directly or indirectly impacted by the revolutionary period.

Cumann na mBan played an active role during the War of Independence and supported the anti-Treaty side during the Civil War. Cumann na Saoirse was formed in 1922 to give a platform to women who supported the Treaty.

Many women in the county were not members of either organisation, but nevertheless played a vital role in the struggle for freedom.

Women helped with intelligence gathering, the movement of munitions, hiding and transporting arms, distributing propaganda, sheltering volunteers, disseminating information, and caring at the frontline for the injured and bereaved.

The women of the time believed strongly in the promise of the 1916 Proclamation that women should be treated equally to men and contributed to the establishment of equal suffrage.

A statement from KCC said that women in Kerry were integral to the revolutionary period and that many suffered greatly for their involvement or for their connections to others. Often, it was women who bore the direct brunt of reprisals.

“These women had determination, strength, resilience, and vulnerability. They were brave, committed and visionary, ideological, political, radical and propagandists. Some were reluctant, many suffered, and silence was often part of their life at the time. Many never spoke of the impact of their experiences,” the statement read.

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