Biographical history
Born
in Paris, FranÁoise Henry studied at the Šcole du Louvre under the
great celticist, Henri Hubert. Her first major publication Les Tumulus du DÈpartment de la CÙte-díOr was a comprehensive
study of Iron Age burials. She studied Carolingian and medieval art
with Emile M’le and Henri Focillon and it was her interest in
medieval art that led her to Ireland and University College Dublin.
During a visit to Ireland in the late 1920s she saw the Ahenny
Crosses in County Tipperary which perhaps more than anything else
attracted her to the study of Irish art. In 1928 she published her
first article on Irish art, ëLa chapelle de Cormac ý Cashelí.
Her
career began in UCD as an exchange lecturer in the Department of
French in 1934. By the 1940s she was lecturing in Archaeology and
European Art, working on a study of Irish antiquities and
accumulating a large collection of illustrations of Irish art,
mainly in the form of photographic negatives and prints. Some years
later Dr Henri became Director of Studies in Archaeology and the
History of European Painting. The nucleus of what is now the History
of Art Department in University College Dublin is to be found in the
Purser-Griffith lecture series on European painting which she began
in 1934.
She
carried out a considerable amount of excavation work at Glendalough,
at Iniskea off the Mayo coast, and elsewhere; but she is primarily
renowned as a scholar of early Irish art. Her first important
publication on the subject was La
sculpture irlandaise in 1934. In 1940 she published a major work
entitled Irish Art, a
study combining manuscripts, sculpture and metalwork in brilliant
synthesis. The culmination of her publishing career was the three
volume work in French and English which appeared between 1963 and
1970óLíArt irlandais,
Irish art in the early Christian period, during the Viking
invasions, and in the Romanesque period.
Dr
Henri retired from UCD in 1974, the year in which the Book of Kells appeared, reproductions from the manuscript for which
she wrote the text. Her final years were spent at her home at Lindry
in France where she died in 1982.
Archival
history
Collection
transferred from the Department of Archaeology, University College
Dublin which retains a collection of c.20,000
negatives and prints. A description of the photographic collection
is available at www.ucd.ie/~archdata/H.html.
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