Visual art round-up: The best exhibitions to see this week

Xavier Theunis, Camille Souter, Jason Ellis and more

Amelia Stein, Portrait of Rosemarie and Seán Mulcahy at the  Butler Gallery
Amelia Stein, Portrait of Rosemarie and Seán Mulcahy at the Butler Gallery

The Seán and Rosemarie Mulcahy Collection Bequest Butler Gallery, The Castle, Kilkenny

Until October 29th butlergallery.com Engineer and artist Seán Mulcahy and art historian Rosemarie Mulcahy (née Scully) were active, well-known and popular figures in Irish art for many years. Rosemarie died suddenly in 2012 and Seán died last year. In a cultural bequest, the Butler received a group of works from their art collection and it is on view until the end of the month. With pieces by Hughie O'Donoghue, Basil Blackshaw, Eilis O'Connell, James O'Nolan and many more.

Bone In Skin On by Xavier Theunis the the  Green on Red gallery
Bone In Skin On by Xavier Theunis the the Green on Red gallery

Bone In Skin On Xavier Theunis. Green on Red Gallery, Park Lane, Spencer Docks (rear of apartments), Dublin Optically intense, "playful reinterpretations of still life, landscape, design and architecture: in drawings, photographic works, sculptures, installation and paintings" by French-Belgian artist Xavier Theunis.

Desert Shield by Camille Souter at the Custom House Gallery, Westport
Desert Shield by Camille Souter at the Custom House Gallery, Westport

Camille Souter Selected works. Custom House Gallery, The Quay, Westport, Co Mayo

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Until December 1st customhousestudios.ie Author of an extensive study of the artist, Garrett Cormican curates a compact survey of the work of renowned, Achill-based painter Camille Souter, a major figure in Irish art for many decades. Plus sculptural pieces by her late husband, Frank Morris.

Simulacra Jason Ellis. Oliver Sears Gallery, 33 Fitzwilliam St Upper, Dublin

Until November 29th oliversearsgallery.com The inaugural show in Oliver Sears' new space features recent work by virtuoso stone-carver Jason Ellis. The 12 included works draw on some of the most celebrated stone reliefs in art history, including pieces found in "the Parthenon, the Antiquities room in the Louvre and Donatello". The vivid clarity of Ellis's carving belies the fragmentary, eroded nature of the venerable sources and recalls the moment of their creation.

Pink Roses by Rosemary Higbee at the  Goma Gallery, Waterford
Pink Roses by Rosemary Higbee at the Goma Gallery, Waterford

Rosemary Higbee Retrospective Goma Gallery, Lombard St, Waterford

Until November 16th   Under the auspices of Imagine Arts Festival, a celebration of the work of Rosemary Higbee, who was born in India in 1923, spent the second World War years in England and settled in Waterford in 1973 (her family were from Gracedieu). Perhaps influenced by her early years in India, her vivid, modernist compositions are highly coloured, with great luminosity. When working she used "brushes, palette knives and fingers". Plus other visual arts events, see imagineartsfestival.com