JOYCEAN PICS 2013
Belfast (Ir. Beal Feirste) and Joyce
Contents of This Page


 
 
  Ulster Hall
  
  
  
  
  

 
CONTENTS 2013
   1  Belfast IASIL 2013@Queen's University Belfast
   2  Belfast (Ir. Beal Feirste) and Joyce
   3  Belfast (Ir. Beal Feirste): miscellanea
   4  Dublin (Ir. Baile Atha Cliath) and Joyce
   5  Dublin (Ir. Baile Atha Cliath): miscellanea
   6  Sligo (Ir. Sligeach)
   7  Copenhagen (Da. Kobenhavn)
   8  Elsinore (Da. Helsingor)
   9  Odense
  10  The 2013 Shanghai James Joyce Symposium
  11  Shanghai: miscellanea

Belfast (Ir. Beal Feirste) and Joyce

Sunday 21st - Saturday 27th July 2013






IMAGE
IMAGE NO.
DATA
Ulster Hall
     It is known that James Joyce tried to buy the Ulster Hall for use as a cinema in February 1912.
  The Ulster Hall is a concert hall and grade B1 listed building in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  Situated on Bedford Street in Belfast city centre, the hall hosts concerts, classical recitals, craft fairs and political party conferences.  Despite the opening of larger concert halls in the city, such as the Waterfront Hall and the Odyssey, the Ulster Hall has remained a very popular venue, and is considered to evoke much more atmosphere than the newer venues.
  Built in 1859 and opened in 1862, the hall's purpose was to provide the expanding city of Belfast with a multi-purpose venue of sufficient size.  It was designed by William J. Barre (also responsible for the Albert Clock) for the Ulster Hall Company.  On its opening night on 12 May 1862, the hall was described by the local press as:
  "stand[ing] unexcelled, and all but unrivalled, as an edifice for the production of musical works... the hall is a great and unmingled success, and the public, no less than the proprietors, may feel the utmost gratification at a result at once so pleasant and so rare." (The Belfast News Letter, 1862)
  "a music hall fit for the production of any composition, and for the reception of any artist, however eminent" (The Northern Whig, 14 May 1862)
  In 1902 the hall was purchased by Belfast City Council (then named the Belfast Corporation) for 13,500 and it has been used as a public hall ever since.  During World War II it was used as a dance hall to entertain American troops stationed in Northern Ireland.  (Referred to the site of "Wikipedia")
jpeg
blf2013-120
(Tuesday 23 July) Ulster Hall, 34 Bedford St Belfast, County Antrim BT2 7FF
jpeg
blf2013-123
(Tuesday 23 July) Ulster Hall, 34 Bedford St Belfast, County Antrim BT2 7FF
jpeg
blf2013-124
(Tuesday 23 July) Ulster Hall, 34 Bedford St Belfast, County Antrim BT2 7FF
jpeg
blf2013-126
(Tuesday 23 July) Ulster Hall, 34 Bedford St Belfast, County Antrim BT2 7FF
jpeg
blf2013-127
(Tuesday 23 July) Ulster Hall, 34 Bedford St Belfast, County Antrim BT2 7FF
jpeg
blf2013-130
(Tuesday 23 July) Ulster Hall, 34 Bedford St Belfast, County Antrim BT2 7FF




        


Maintained by Eishiro Ito