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Speaking to the Irish Independent recently when he was picking up the Business and Finance award for outstanding contribution to public life, the Excalibur, Usual Suspects and In Treatment star said the worlds of arts and business are “tentatively” linked.
He was being honoured for his work with the Irish Arts Centre in New York – which he said would not have got off the ground without corporate sponsorship.
“The arts people think the business people are all just about money, and the money people think the arts people are just the annoying begging-bowl cousin,” he said.
“I think that when any one of us goes abroad, we really have to negotiate the world with an Irish identity.
“You don’t know you’re Irish until you actually leave Ireland and then suddenly you’re Irish.
“Intuitively, we are so proud of our heritage and our culture, and we bring with us our national characteristics like humour and so forth.
“And that is the soft power that goes before business.
“If you hadn’t had Oscar Wilde and WB Yeats and that whole thing, you mightn’t have the emergence of such a strong business power because what attracts people, to a great extent, is the cultural and artistic identity of the country itself.”
Gabriel Byrne received the TK Whitaker Award at the The Business and Finance Awards 2023. Photo: Andres Poveda
The awards, which took place earlier this month in Dublin’s Convention Centre, saw a number of firms, including electrical goods firm Glen Dimplex, HR firm Cpl and insurer Aviva scoop awards under a number of categories.
The Irish Arts Centre, first set up in the 1970s, recently got a $60m makeover – part-funded by the Irish Government – and moved locations.
Though it is still based in the Hell’s Kitchen neighbourhood in midtown Manhattan.
It includes a new theatre space and cafe and will feature theatre, music, dance and film screenings as well as a visual arts space.
Byrne said the centre “had to incorporate the world of business” to succeed.
“Corporate sponsorship helped. It wouldn’t have achieved completion if it hadn’t been for that.
“I came to understand that the world of business and the world of arts are necessarily and tentatively linked.”
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