In 1935, Albert Power collaborated with the sculptor Denis Doyle on four bronze wolfhounds for the monument to Liam Lynch (1893–1923), Chief of Staff of the anti-Treaty IRA, erected near the spot in the Knockmealdown Mountains, Co. Tipperary, where Lynch was fatally wounded during the Irish Civil War.
A surviving photograph from the family archive shows Power working directly in clay on one of the wolfhounds in his studio, with Doyle beside him — a rare documented instance of Power collaborating closely with another sculptor on a single sculptural element, rather than executing an entire commission independently.
The wolfhound, as a symbol of Ireland, recurs across Power’s work — he was also commissioned to include wolfhounds in his unfinished 1938 design for the Young Irelanders monument at Glasnevin Cemetery, though those were never cast due to lack of funds. The Liam Lynch wolfhounds, by contrast, were completed and remain in place at the monument today.