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Full coverage: culture

Culture as infrastructure: Richard Tierney on St Patrick’s Festival

After decades in live entertainment and commercial partnerships, Richard Tierney took on Ireland’s national festival with a clear brief: make it sustainable and prove it could stand on its own two feet.

Ian Kehoe
11th Feb, 2026 - 5 min read

“I feel that the Book of Kells feeds into the Irish DNA, rather than the other way round”

What do you know about the Book of Kells? And what do you think you know? A new book by art historian Victoria Whitworth questions its origin story.

Dion Fanning
20th Dec, 2025 - 6 min read

“We were scared for people who were putting their heads above the parapet”

Ten years ago, a response to the Abbey’s programme to mark the 1916 centenary launched the Waking the Feminists movement. Sarah Durcan was one of the organisers and she talks about a new book on the movement.

Dion Fanning
25th Oct, 2025 - 5 min read

Taylor Swift Inc: How pop’s biggest star turned emotion into equity

The self-made billionaire is the most profitable live musician in history. What drives her? Good old American moneymaking.

Kate Demolder
11th Oct, 2025 - 6 min read

Retrospective rhythm: Peter Monaghan’s art of precision

The artist, celebrated for his dynamic three-dimensional works, reflects on his decision to turn to art in his 40s and how a glass half-full attitude and some luck along the way helped him find his place in the art world.

Ruth O'Connor
26th May, 2025 - 9 min read

Andrea Mara: “Rich people doing bad things is fun to read” 

In her new thriller, It Should Have Been You, Andrea Mara unfurls the meeting point of technology, loneliness and the taboo all new mothers face.

Kate Demolder
10th May, 2025 - 7 min read

“One of the reasons history on this island is so complex is that it always ends in a score draw”

There is a difference between the history and the stories we tell ourselves. Historian Mike Cronin talks to Dion Fanning about how altering the stories will take generations, and being an English academic writing on Irish history.

Dion Fanning
10th May, 2025 - 6 min read

Folk, fame and failure: The biopics plotting the gritty journeys of great bohemians

Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan getting the screen treatment in recent months are just the latest incarnations of an increasingly popular genre that has featured such diverse geniuses as Mozart and Johnny Cash.

Fergal Lenehan
26th Apr, 2025 - 7 min read

A thirst for the Irish: How London became obsessed with Gaelic culture

Once a capital city where Irish people struggled to punctuate meaning, impact and influence, London now boasts an Irish cultural calling card. But what’s behind the change?

Kate Demolder
22nd Mar, 2025 - 7 min read

A one-in-a-generation media talent: Fintan Drury recalls dinner with his hero Michael Parkinson

Listening to Michael Parkinson that evening, journalism, radio, and television in the England of the 1970s appeared to reflect an emerging dynamism, free-spiritedness, or even bolshiness of younger generations in northern England.

Fintan Drury
19th Aug, 2023 - 8 min read
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