LITTLE golden swallows have landed on a number of buildings in Enniskillen town centre as the first phase of Wilde Island Town (WIT): Home of the Happy Prince launched this week.

WIT is a literary tourism project that aims to stimulate new year-round tourism for County Fermanagh and to offer timely support for the revitalisation of Enniskillen's High Street.

The initial phase of the project will see the installation of 150 little swallows in gold leaf in and around Enniskillen centre, on the exterior facades of retail stores and community buildings, including its schools.

According to Sean Doran, Artistic Director of Arts Over Borders, the organisation delivering the project, the swallows installation is a fitting start to the project as the swallow symbolises optimism and hope, and builds upon author Oscar Wilde’s association with Enniskillen.

The number of swallows is also significant, as 2021 marks the 150th anniversary of Wilde leaving Enniskillen, where he had lived as a boarder at Portora Royal School from 1864-1871.

“Enniskillen was the longest that Oscar Wilde lived anywhere outside his birthplace in Dublin and married years in London,” said Sean.

“It is believed that his children’s story, 'The Happy Prince', was first inspired by Wilde looking out from his dormitory window at Portora Royal School across the island town to the opposite hill, where Cole’s statue stood high above the town.

“This belief is the central tenet in an idea that will draw upon Wilde’s association with Enniskillen to drive tourism and help to revitalise the town and its surrounds as we move out of periods of lockdown that have impacted heavily on the retail, tourism and hospitality sectors.”

Artists Simon Carman and Helen Sharp are a professional partnership who worked on the flight of the little golden swallow in collaboration, with Arthur Brooke as their studio assistant.

Simon is a professional sculptor recently cited as "one of Ireland’s greatest living sculptors", and is also an experienced sculpture technician with more than 25 years of experience of technical sculpture in both the public and private realm.

Helen also has a 25-year art career, involving both public and private art works, and has 15 years of experience managing art projects.

Both artists live and work in Fermanagh and hand-produced the 150 stainless steel swallows in their Fermanagh studio.

A key issue that Wilde Island Town will address is seasonality for Enniskillen and Fermanagh.

The current reality is that it is principally a summer-only tourism destination, but Wilde Island Town aims to ignite the spark to transform the area in the future into a year-round, 365-day tourism destination associated with Oscar Wilde.

It will holistically connect place, events, performances, businesses and community.

Sally Rees, Project Support, who is working with local businesses and organisations on the installation, says that people across the town are delighted to be involved as they recognise that 'The Flight of The Little Golden Swallow' will have a positive impact felt by the whole community.

“The project has already captured the collective imagination of people here, and that is testament already to the power it will have.

"WIT will demonstrate how an entire urban town and community in all its facets of business, culture, education, tourism, services, leisure, hospitality, industry and so on can be holistically brought together and united under a single literary tourism concept.

"It's a case of the whole being made greater through this model than the sum of its parts. It’s very exciting,” said Sally.

The project builds on the work laid down by the Arts Over Borders destination literary tourism events in Enniskillen and Fermanagh on Samuel Beckett and Oscar Wilde that have been developed there since 2012.

These are short, three- to four-day festivals only, and do not have the continuous year-round impact that WIT seeks to develop.

However, these existing literary tourism events have established the process of associating literary tourism with this part of the world.