This is an Important Antique Irish Impressionist Portrait Oil Painting on Canvas, attributed to the famed Irish Impressionist Painter and Poet, Geroge Russell "Æ" (1867 - 1935.) This painting depicts the charming portrait of a short-haired young girl, why shyly stares off to the right of the viewer's gaze. Her large expressive eyes, cherubic face, and clothing suggest that she is perhaps 11 or 12 years old at the time of this portrait. Signed with Russell's ubiquitous pseudonym and dated: "Æ 1899" in the lower left corner. Additionally, this piece has an old, yellowed label of provenance on the verso, which reads: "Painting 1899 - Of Cecilia, of Armenian and Turkish parentage. To Mae from Pearle - 1975." Approximately 20 1/2 x 23 1/2 inches (including frame.) Actual artwork is approximately 15 x 18 inches. Very good condition for well over a century of age, with some light scuffing and edge wear to the antique wooden frame (please see photos.) Acquired from an old collection in Los Angeles County, California. Priced to Sell. Photo 24 displays the image of a similar portrait by Russell, dating to the same time period, that was offered for sale at an auction house in Ireland in 2022. George Russell's original paintings are in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of Ireland, Ulster Museum, Butler Gallery, Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, OPW, Trinity College, Dublin, and the Crawford Gallery, among others. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks! 



About the Artist:

George Russell Born:  1867 - County Armagh, Ireland
Died:   1935 - Bournemouth, Ireland
Known for:  Landscape, portrait, figures and mural painting
Name variants:  AE Russell

George Russell (1867 - 1935) was active/lived in Ireland.  George Russell is known for Landscape, portrait, figures and mural painting.

The Irish landscape artist, portraitist and mural painter George Russell, known by his pseudonym AE, was born in County Armagh in 1867.  As well as a painter, Russell was a poet, playwright, journalist, editor, critic, mystic and evangelist for the co-operative movement.  Brought up in Dublin, he studied drawing and painting at evening classes in the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art*. After this he attended evening classes at the Royal Hibernian Academy*. A fellow student was WB Yeats. In 1888-9, Russell won the RHA prize for the best figure painting from the living model.

In 1890, AE Russell began work as an accounts clerk. In his spare time (encouraged by WB Yeats) he wrote poetry, studied theosophy and painted murals. In 1897, Russell joined the Irish Agricultural Organization Society (IAOS), an agricultural co-operative movement begun by Horace Plunkett. Plunkett needed someone to help develop credit societies. W.B. Yeats suggested Russell, who duly became Assistant Secretary of the IAOS, traveling extensively throughout Ireland as a spokesman for the society.

In 1898, Russell married and settled in County Dublin where he continued to write, paint, create murals, illustrate, design costumes and tapestries. In 1903 he exhibited over 40 oil paintings, mostly landscapes, at Leinster Hall, Dublin. More exhibitions followed, both solo and with Countess Markievicz. His output of pictures rose, including portraits, not least because they were a valuable source of extra income. In 1905, he showed at the Royal Hibernian Academy, the Fine Arts Society in London and at the London Salon.  From 1907-1911, he took part in four group exhibitions at Leinster Hall with (inter alia) William Leech and Dermod O'Brien. He also created several murals and friezes.

AE Russell continued painting and exhibiting throughout the period up until 1928. In that year he undertook the first of several lecture tours to the USA, limiting himself during this time mainly to sketches, illustrations, charcoal and crayon drawings. He died two years after his wife, in a Bournemouth nursing home in 1935. The following year a memorial exhibition was held for him at the Daniel Egan Gallery, Dublin.  In 1967, a centenary exhibition of Russell's works was staged at the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, as well as one at the National Gallery of Ireland. AE Russell's paintings are held in a number of public collections throughout Ireland.

Biography from Adam's (James Adam & Sons Ltd.)

George W. Russell was born in County Armagh in 1867 and moved to Dublin with his family at the age of 11. In 1884 Russell began attending Dublin’s Metropolitan School of Art where he met W.B.Yeats, who became a close companion and later rival. That same year Russell experienced the first of many vivid waking visions, which would remain an important source of knowledge and insight throughout his life.

His mystical leanings led to an affiliation with the Dublin Lodge of the Theosophical Society. Comprised of a mélange of ideas involving reincarnation, past lives, astral planes, higher consciousness and spiritual evolution, Theosophical doctrine appealed to legions of people in the late 19th century. Russell’s interest in Theosophy is reflected in his first book of collected poems, ‘Homeward: Songs by the way,’ which was published in 1894, confirmed his central role as a figure of the Irish Literary Renaissance.

It was an error in the printing of this book that resulted in Russell becoming known as ‘AE’. Russell originally intended to have printed the word AEON, the name of an eternal entity in the Pantheon of Gnosticism but by a printer’s error this was altered to AE, the pseudonym which he adopted and became known by.

Though ostensibly some of his artworks may seem somewhat whimsical they gain a complexity when viewed in relation to the multifarious - seemingly contradictory- facets of Russell’s character. AE’s tendency toward mysticism and spiritual contemplation was balanced with a politically active and deeply practical side.

His work as a painter and writer was carried out in tandem with his career as a devoted political and economic thinker. In 1905 AE became the editor of the Irish Homestead, the main publication of the Irish Agricultural Organization Society, which was established in 1894 to advocate agricultural co-operativism.

Evidently, this role necessitated considerable practical and logistical acumen. AE spent summers in the west and northwest of Ireland and Donegal came to be a destination that he particularly favoured.


Biography from Morgan O'Driscoll

George William Russell was born in Lurgan, County Armagh in 1867, but his family relocated to Dublin when he was eleven years old.

Russell was educated at Rathmines School and the Metropolitan School of Art.

Russell's interests were wide-ranging; he became a theosophist and wrote extensively on politics and economics, while continuing to paint and write poetry.

Russell claimed to be a clairvoyant, able to view various kinds of spiritual beings, which he illustrated in his paintings and drawings. 

Russell wrote with the pseudonym Æ (sometimes written AE or A.E.).

George Russell passed away in 1935 in Bournemouth, Ireland.



George Russell grew up in Lurgan, Co. Armagh but moved to Dublin at the age of 11. He is known not only for his paintings but as a writer, poet, critic, theosophist and economist, and by his pseudonym ‘Æ’ (a derivative of the word Aeon).

He began night time painting classes at the Metropolitan School of Art just two years after moving to Dublin, and went on to receive academic training at the RHA. AE supported Hugh Lane’s campaign for the gallery of modern art and was active in the Irish Literary Revival. He exhibited abroad at the 1913 Armory Show in New York and at the Whitechapel in London, and created a large scale series of murals of 3 Upper Ely Place in Dublin which has been compared to the work of Goya.

His paintings can be found in the collection of the Ulster Museum, National Gallery of Ireland, Hugh Lane, OPW, Trinity College Dublin and the Crawford Gallery.  

George Russell's work was included in 'Ulster Artists' exhibition (2010) and 'Ireland: Her People and Landscape' (2013).


Ireland’s Forgotten Genius, George ‘AE’ Russell

Michael McKernan


He is a man of extraordinary prodigality of mind. Ideas, the hoarded gold of others, are scattered by him with amazing profusion. There is probably no writer today who does not owe something to Mr. Russell[.]

Irish novelist and playwright, George A. Birmingham

In recent times the various ‘centenaries’ of the events surrounding the birth of an independent Ireland have led to a renewed public interest in the outstanding leaders of that time. Political leaders such as Pearse, Connolly, De Valera, and Collins and literary giants such as Yeats, Shaw, and Joyce have all been the subject of retrospective appraisal.

Yet in the period from 1900 to 1930, one now largely forgotten figure, George William Russell, better known as ‘AE’, was a leader across just about every sector of Irish life. He was a political thinker, economist, rural reformer, publisher, editor, poet, artist, and visionary. No one else in the history of that time comes close to matching Russell in the sheer breadth of his contribution to public life.

How did he acquire the unusual name AE? As a writer Russell adopted different pen-names. Once, opening a book at a random page the word ‘Aeon’ seemed to jump out at him and he was charmed that ‘Aeon’ was a gnostic and mystic term meaning the earliest living creatures. He immediately used it as a pen name for a philosophical article. However, the printer could only make out the first two letters of his writing and thus ‘AE’ appeared below the article. People referred to the influential article as ‘AE’s’ article and so AE stayed with him thereafter.

The recent upsurge in interest in AE Russell means all of this is about to change. Since 2017, there have been successive annual festivals in his hometown of Lurgan, County Armagh. Several new books have appeared, and a new National & International Society is being formed in Dublin in 2023. One of the ambitious plans facing the new Society is the project to create a new Cultural Centre based on AE’s rich legacy.

Russell was born in Lurgan, county Armagh, in 1867 and left at the age of 11 when his family moved to Dublin. However, he maintained his Northern connections throughout his adult life. He often acknowledged the formative influence his northern childhood had had on him. As an activist, it had given him an aversion to violence and sectarianism and although his family wasn’t poor, a loathing of the indignity of grinding poverty never left him.

In contrast, as an artist, his childhood had filled him with the colourful visions, memories and images of carefree days exploring Lurgan’s sprawling Brownlow estate with its turreted castle and shimmering lake and parklands. These images later flowed into AE’s poems and paintings and, most especially, in his later collaboration with author Pamela Travers as she produced ‘Mary Poppins’. Much of the imagery in ‘Mary Poppins’ came from AE’s suggestions, based on his vivid childhood memories of Lurgan.

In Dublin, AE attended art college where he met W. B. Yeats. They were to be friends (and rivals) for the next fifty years. AE’s contemporaries were astonished at his natural ability to draw immediately anything he saw. It may well have been AE’s talent in visual art that persuaded W. B. Yeats to pursue poetry instead.

Although Russell never considered art as a career, such was his talent that he became recognised as one of the best painters in Ireland. When leaders of the United States arts community curated a major exhibition of European art in New York in 1913 only 3 Irish painters, including AE, were invited to contribute. On the poster for the Manhattan event, the greatest exhibition of European Art ever, the only Irish name was Russell – alongside artists like Monet, Cezanne, and Van Gogh.

After art college, Russell settled down to years of study of Theosophy, becoming an avid student of ancient Indian philosophies. He maintained himself working as a clerk in a Dublin Department store. Eventually AE emerged, certain about his role in life and guided by a code which required personal discipline, full deployment of his talents in the service of others and a disregard for reward or recognition.

He joined Horace Plunkett’s Cooperative movement and immediately proved to be a highly effective organiser of rural cooperatives. He went around Ireland forming hundreds of cooperative societies eventually becoming Secretary of the movement and editor of its influential journal ‘The Irish Homestead.’ His success came from a pragmatic determination to tackle rural poverty but also his belief that workers on the land deserved respect and dignity. At the ‘Irish Homestead,’ he ensured that rural readers enjoyed coverage of politics, culture and the arts as well as all things agricultural.

Russell wrote extensively on the economics of sustainable rural communities. His work was admired in Ireland and internationally. In India, Gandhi expressed interest in Russell’s thinking, including how sweeping change could be achieved without violence. Later in depression-torn America, Roosevelt’s administration sought Russell’s advice on rural economics. Russell embarked on several tours of the United States addressing packed meetings, accepting honorary degrees from universities, broadcasting on radio and advising the US Government directly. Much of the thinking behind Roosevelt’s ‘New Deal’ stems from Russell’s ideas.

Æ was a prophet out of an ancient age. He was one of the finest, most gifted, and most colourful people I ever knew. Never anything but the utmost humility, simplicity, sweetness and light. May God grant that the Irish may be able to produce such a man again.

 Vice-President Henry Wallace of the United States

While driving cooperation forward, AE had also been writing poetry and was eventually persuaded to publish it.  Like in his painting, AE’s talent shone through and there was an immediate market for him in Ireland and abroad. In the early 20th century, he was regarded as being on a par with Yeats. Yeats himself described AE as:

The one poet of modern Ireland who has moulded a spiritual ecstasy into verse…The most delicate and subtle poetry that any Irishman of our time has written.

AE also encouraged the talent of others using the ‘Irish Homestead’ and later the ‘Irish Statesman’ to showcase new writers. He was the first to publish James Joyce, Patrick Kavanagh, and many others. Frank O’Connor described Russell as: “The father of three generations of Irish writers.” AE is referred to repeatedly in Ulysses including Joyce’s famous acknowledgement “AEIOU.”

As a writer, Russell was unsurpassed for his challenging commentary on public affairs and his impressively resourceful prescriptions for economic and social progress. Unsurprisingly, many people sought him out for advice and support. This not only included poets and painters, but leaders of cultural organizations, and politicians.

AE knew the revolutionary leaders of the era. He knew them mainly through literary connections – Pearse and McDonagh were both accomplished poets – or through his agricultural reform work. Connolly was an admirer of AE and the two had supported workers during the 1913 Dublin Lockout.

Russell told the poet-revolutionaries that he did not share their views. He was a pacifist and more concerned with the character of any future Ireland than bringing it about by uprising. To this end, Russell applied himself to the creation of many of Ireland’s embryonic cultural institutions including the Metropolitan Gallery, the Abbey Theatre, the Cuala Press, and the United Arts Club as well as writing a prescription for progressive nationhood in “The National Being.”

He worked in the 1917 Convention hoping it would bring about an honourable political settlement. He was horrified by the bloodshed of the War of Independence and the Civil War that followed. In the new Free State, he pursued progressive causes, uniquely supporting the suffragettes and women’s rights; calling for respect for Irishmen who had fought in WW1, and opposing  conscription and censorship.

AE died on 17th July, 1935 in England.  His return to Ireland was honoured with an aerial salute as the boat arrived in Dun Laoghaire. The Irish Times reported that 500,000 people took to the streets of Dublin for his funeral. The procession was over a mile long.

Today it is hard to explain how this remarkable man has virtually disappeared into the footnotes of Irish history. However, groups of admirers have recently come together across Ireland to address this obvious deficit – and AE will finally get the recognition his greatness deserves. There have been successive annual festivals in Russell’s hometown of Lurgan, County Armagh, two new books (a short biography and poetry anthology) with more underway, and a new National & International Society is being formed right now in Dublin. AE enthusiasts have even held a recent Convention in Donegal taking in all the places where Russell used to go and paint.

One of the ambitious plans facing the new Society is the project to create a new Cultural Centre based and themed around AE’s rich legacy. It aspires to be a place that can house a major collection of his paintings and writings and be a magnetic and luminous attraction for all interested in AE and the momentous 1890-1930 period in Irish history.



AE, America’s forgotten friend