LONDON — This previous March 8, on Worldwide Ladies’s Day, an 82-year-old alchemical vulva boarded the London Tube to protest in entrance of parliament. Her title is Growler, and she or he is portrayed by Irish artist-activist Dee Mulrooney carrying flowing pink and pink robes and hoods. That very same day, she shared a brand new music, “Free Síle na Giġ,” set to the melody of the Irish nursery rhyme Dílín O Deamhas and calling for the repatriation of a Síle na Giġ statue that’s at present held within the British Museum. Within the piece, launched by the impartial community-focused report label Ómós Information, Growler urged the museum to return the dwelling ancestor again to its Irish homeland, from the place it was stolen within the 1860s.
Síle na Giġ — also called Sheela Na Gig — are carved figures distinguished by giant protruding labia lips usually held open by the sculpture’s arms. They adorned the cornerstones and tympanums of church buildings throughout Eire and have been typically even integrated into architectural designs. Some students say that they symbolize a pre-Christian goddess, whereas others argue that they’re fertility symbols of amulets meant to guard towards evil.
An instance of a Sheela Na Gig corbel outdoors of the Church of St. Mary and St. David at Kilpeck, Herefordshire (photograph through Getty Photos)
Though these carvings, relationship between the twelfth to sixteenth centuries, survived the Roman occupation of Britain and Christianity’s violent arrival, they have been largely torn off church buildings within the seventeenth and 18th centuries. Some have been saved and integrated into public partitions, the place they continue to be in the present day, whereas others are in museum collections, as is the case of the Síle na Giġ on the British Museum.
Discovered among the many stays of the derelict Chloran Fort in Westmeath, this specific statue was taken by Sir Benjamin James Chapman, who owned the property, and made its technique to British collector George Witt. From 1860, when Witt donated it to the British Museum, the Síle na Giġ sat within the basement for over 150 years, largely uncatalogued and hidden away till it was included within the British Museum and La Caixa Basis’s joint exhibition Revered and Feared: Female Energy in Artwork and Beliefs in 2024.
Growler protesting for the repatriation of the Síle na Gig again to Eire in entrance of the British Museum (photograph by Richie Heffernan, courtesy the artist)
Mulrooney, who first started demonstrating within the streets of Berlin, the place she lives, in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, traveled to see the sculpture in February. The artist has been fascinated by Síle na Giġ ever since she started her activism as Growler, who is known as after a slang time period for “vulva” used within the Northside of Dublin. She began working with the Merseyside-based arts group Coronary heart of Glass, which sponsored Growler to go to Síle na Giġ on the British Museum. For Mulrooney, “this is part of the pilgrimage.”
“She’s an eternal pilgrim because there’s no fixed destination,” she stated. In different phrases, the undertaking gained’t finish with the repatriation of this Síle na Giġ.
However when Mulrooney, as Growler, arrived on the British Museum, the Síle na Giġ was out on show in Spain, so she traveled to see her. The artist was deeply disturbed by what little context surrounded the gathering of feminine religious symbols at Caixa Discussion board in Madrid. Regardless of panels indicating that many take into account the Síle na Giġ a dwelling ancestor, there was no recognition that the sculpture, together with many objects on show, have been stolen. The artist additionally stated she was prohibited from getting into the gallery house in her Growler apparel.
“It’s mad that we couldn’t make that decision as women ourselves to invite a representative of the Mother of God in to talk about a kidnapped ancestor,” Growler stated.
The Caixa Discussion board and the British Museum haven’t responded to Hyperallergic‘s requests for comment.
So on International Women’s Day, Growler debuted her music set to a joyous Irish tune that each main scholar in Eire is aware of, calling for Síle na Giġ’s return.
“It’s using human levity to talk about something that is really quite dark,” Mulrooney defined a few video she posted on Instagram, displaying Growler on the steps of the British Museum.
Her music didn’t simply name for atonement for a dwelling ancestor, but additionally affirmed pressing human rights as entry to abortion is beneath assault and gender-based violence stays outstanding in Eire and the US.
“It’s not about a stone sculpture that fell off a church in the 1860s,” Mulrooney stated. “It’s way deeper than that, she’s a symbol for female sovereignty.”

