The Tyrone Guthrie Centre, often known as Annaghmakerrig, is a residential facility for creative artists. Located at Annaghmakerrig, Newbliss, County Monaghan, Ireland, it was founded in 1981. The house was the family home of theatrical directorSir Tyrone Guthrie, and he bequeathed it to the Irish nation in 1971, to be used as an artistic retreat. The centre is a residential workplace open to professional practitioners in all art forms. Creative residencies are for periods of from two weeks to three to six months.
History
Tyrone Guthrie left, in his will: The gift of the house, in 1971, was accepted by the Irish government, and it opened to guests in 1981.
Facilities
The retreat centre is sited within a gated wooded estate. In the main residence, the "Big House," guests are catered for, with food partly supplied from the estate's organic gardens. Each bedroom includes a writing or work desk and chair, and has its own selection of books and paintings, and a view. Ten of the rooms have en-suite bathrooms and most have fireplaces. Linen and towels are provided. Up to seven guests can stay in the five self-catering cottages, each with a small stove. Eight well-lit and heated studio spaces are also available, along with a performance/dance space opened in 2006.
Approach
Residencies at the centre are by application only, and are selective. Applicants must have some track record in their field. Once granted, residences are for up to three months for those seeking and accepted for the "Big House" and up to six months for those in the self-catering "Farmyard Cottages." Accommodation fees are modest, and there are some bursaries available to at least partly defray them for qualified candidates. Once resident, guests are welcome to work as they wish. The only stipulation, as set out in the donor's will, is that all guests must gather nightly for a communal dinner, generally held at 7 p.m., and nowadays in the kitchen of the Big House.
The first Director of the centre was Bernard Loughlin, who managed it with his wife, and oversaw its initial setup and the reintegration of the estate. Loughlin was succeeded by Regina Doyle in an acting capacity, then by Sheila Pratschke, Pat Donlon and Robbie McDonald.
Bursaries
Among the many bursaries covering the cost of accommodation at the centre are:
To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the retreat centre in 2016, a book with a selection of materials from projects connected to the facility was published. Entitled simply "Annaghmakerrig," it was edited by the centre's then director, Sheila Pratschke, working with two selectors, Evelyn Conlon for writing and Ruairi O Cuiv for visual art, and contains work exclusively by guests of the centre, including Colm Toibin, Joseph O'Connor, Alice Maher, Patrick Scott, Rosita Boland, John Banville, Claire Keegan, Gerald Barry, and a remembrance of Guthrie as theare director by Eugene McCabe, and a childhood memoir by Joseph Hone.