He executed numerous church memorials throughout the country. His favourite relief was one of the Good Samaritan, which was well suited for memorials to either doctors or clergymen.[1]
Jane Vernon (née Kingsbury, wife of Reverend George Vernon, Rector of Carlow, died 1827 aged 29) in St. Mary's church, Carlow. Kirk's relief shows the poor and the young of Carlow mourning her. To the left are the tools of Jane Vernon's accomplishments: a harp, an easel and a sculptor's chisel.[6]
Thomas Abbott (d. 1837) in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin.
Sir John Andrew Stevenson (d. 1833). In 1843, a marble cenotaph sculpted by Kirk was erected in the Musicians Corner at Christ Church Cathedral. His monument has a bust and a single choirboy. Originally there were two choir boys, but the sculptor found such difficulty in extracting payment for his work that he removed the second one.[6]
Thomas Ball (d. 1826), in St. Patrick's Cathedral.
Rev. Thomas Clarke and others in the Pro-Cathedral, Dublin.
Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith (1764-1840) "Commissioned by the House of Commons as a national monument. It is Kirk's last major work and one of his best. On completion it was first shown at the Royal Academy exhibition in spring 1845 (no.1324) but received at Greenwich that July and installed in the Naval Gallery in the Painted Hall at Greenwich Hospital." Now in the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, England. https://www.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/rmgc-object-63992
References
^ abLangtry, Joe & Carter, Nikki (1997). Mount Jerome: A Victorian Cemetery. Dublin: Staybro Printing Ltd. p. 10.
^Craig, Maurice (1969). Dublin 1660-1860. Dublin: Allen Figgis. p. 287.