2022 – MART Gallery & Studios https://mart.ie Providing Creative Platforms Mon, 29 Jul 2024 08:14:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 https://mart.ie/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/cropped-MART-Just-M-Logo-Transparent-Background-32x32.png 2022 – MART Gallery & Studios https://mart.ie 32 32 Irish Contemporaries {i} https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/irish-contemporaries-i/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/irish-contemporaries-i/#respond Thu, 18 May 2023 15:23:47 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7571

The Irish Contemporaries {i}

THE IRISH CONTEMPORARIES EXHIBITION {I}

A group Visual Art and Film exhibition, including a Live Art performance by Francis Fay and music by Julie Bergman.

Held from 3-8th November at Building Bridges Art Exchange, Bergamot Station.

LocationBuilding Bridges Art Exchange, Unit F2, Bergamot Station, Santa Monica, LA, CA. 90404

Full info on CIACLA’s Website here.

Download the Exhibition Handout Here.

CIACLA – The Contemporary Irish Center Los Angeles, in partnership with MART Gallery & Studios Dublin, were proud to present The Irish Contemporaries {i}, curated by Ciara Scanlan and Matthew Nevin, showcasing contemporary artists living in the island of Ireland and Irish artists abroad, in Los Angeles.

This, the first of two exhibitions in the series, took place 3-8th November 2022 at Building Bridges Art Exchange, located at the prestigious Bergamot Station Arts Centre in Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California.

The exhibition featured two short films by Eoin Heaney and Treasa O’Brien, a group exhibition of visual artwork by Alana Barton, Amna Walayat, Ashley B. Holmes, Austin Ivers, Barbara Healy, Catherine Mwase, Christopher Clery, Claire Prouvost, Elinor O’Donovan, Gráinne Bath Enright, Jennifer Trouton, Julian King, Kata Kukla, Rebecca Bradley, Sarah Edmondson, Scott O’Sullivan, Sheila Flaherty, The Ljilja, Vicki Davis, Tony O’Loughlin, all of whom work across four Artist Studios in Ireland: MART StudiosSample Studios CorkQSS Belfast and Limerick Printmakers, showcasing some of the most exciting artists working today in Ireland.

This exhibition was the first of two exhibitions that will showcase a multidisciplinary selection of Irish Contemporary Artists as part of CIACLA’s ‘Fáilte’ series.

This exhibition was been made possible with support from the Government of Ireland Emigrant Support Programme, Culture Ireland, California Arts Council, LA County Arts Commission, CIACLA, MART Gallery & Studios and Building Bridges Art Exchange.

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Presence – Limerick Printmakers https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/presence-limerick-printmakers/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/presence-limerick-printmakers/#respond Tue, 18 Oct 2022 15:23:39 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7417

Presence – Limerick Printmakers

Opening Reception Saturday October 29th at 1pm.

The MART Gallery, 190A Rathmines Road Lower, Dublin 6.

Exhibition Runs October 29th – November 18th  | Wed-Sat 1-6pm 

The MART Gallery is delighted to present Presence, An exhibition of photography & print from selected members of Limerick Printmakers, curated by Sara Dowling and coordinated by Jess Tobin.

Featured Artists: Chris Clery, Angelina Foster, Carol Kennedy & Verona Stellet, joe Lane, Clara McSweeney, Suzannah O’Reilly, Clodagh Twomey, Isabella Walsh.

 

This exhibition, ‘Presence’ is titled as a comment, not only to the necessity of physical exhibition showcasing following the last few years – but also to the importance of stretching members visibility outside of Limerick and in collaboration with Dublin-based studios such as MART Gallery and Studios in Rathmines.

Selected through an Open Call process, ’Presence’ features work from a selection of nine of Limerick Printmakers 70 members, representing a diverse range of print & photographic processes, individual artist sensibilities and ambitions.

Both Limerick Printmakers & MART Gallery & Studios share a keen belief in supporting artists through access to networks, community and development in addition to space access and use of technical facilities. This too is an ethos that was originally reflected in the initial Open Call brief in March – where members were asked to submit work of any medium that they wished, but to also strongly consider their relationship with process and how this was reflected in their practise in any way. Many took this as an opportunity to examine and acknowledge the space or studios at Limerick Printmakers and how the technical elements of their submissions were reliant on these facilities. Others reimagined previous works in a new light – using this exhibition as an opportunity to push their practise into new areas by way of scope, medium experimentation or collaboration.

It has been no surprise that despite the odds, LP members have remained active in the face of creative adversity, and have embraced this opportunity to exhibit once more with open arms. The selected work speaks for itself, as it includes a number of entirely new works being exhibited for the first time in Ireland, and among the diversity – many identifiable connecting themes can be observed. From a curatorial perspective, this was a welcome coincidence and only spoke to the sense of community and collective ambition held by LP members despite the barriers caused by the pandemics restrictions thus far.

Artists such as Angelina Foster and Clara McSweeney sensitively explore colour and texture in the communication of message, providing a collective colour palette that sets a resonating tone for other works in the space. This is echoed in Carol Kennedy and Verona Stellet’s piece which is a new collaboration for them both, as well as the work by Clodagh Twomey – specifically annotating the words Presence and Recognition which have helped to inspire the exhibitions title. Other words by Joe Lane and Suzannah O’Reilly place importance on the communication of language through word and picture – with collage, overlay and technical direction all at play. This can also be recognised in Chris Cleary’s work, where we see variable colour composition and techniques integral to the works process. Lastly, Isabella Walsh’s photographs contribute a reflective and meditative energy, a diptych of experimentation in exposure.

I extend an incredible thank you to all of the LP artists who submitted work to the Open Call, all of the selected artists whose work is showcased in this exhibition, and of course the teams at both Limerick Printmakers and MART Gallery and Studios for their collective continued recognition of artists support and opportunity carving at such a crucial time.

The exhibition continues at MART Gallery & Studios in Rathmines until Friday 18th November, and is made possible with the support of the Arts Council of Ireland.

~ Sara Dowling

 


Artist Statements / Biographies  

Chris Clery Artist Statement

Inspired by the writing of Italian poet Dante Alighieri, specifically the inferno saga of the divine comedy and his description of hell and everything that resides in it. This work is a homoerotic spin on the hellscape imagery found in the words of his poetry. In his work, each circle of hell represents one of the seven deadly sins. Psychopomps are deities, angelic and demonic in various religions whose responsibility is to escort the deceased souls from Earth to the afterlife. They have been depicted at different times and in different cultures as anthropomorphic entities. The deity’s headpiece is like a portal to the inferno which depicts queer men expressing love as others suffer punishment and damnation. This headpiece is a warning for other journeying souls to the chaotic aspects of queer existence. Balancing two maps displaying the geography of hell on their arms, each circle of hell correlates to aspects of queer culture and the social/economical complications within the community. The imagery of this work suggests the religious and heteronormative aggression queer people suffer from, but like the deity balancing the circles on the arms like a scale, It also shows the self-hatred found within the queer community and the aggression they inflict on each other.

Chris Clery – Artist biography

I graduated in fine art printmaking and contemporary practice from Limerick school of art and design  in 2019. I am currently a member of the Limerick Printmakers where I create work and enjoy being in the printmaking community. I explore my perception and understanding of sexuality, masculinity, and the male gender within my work. I focus on etching, silkscreen, photography, and collage processes. I express my own sexuality and idea of masculinity in my work and how it fits in the world. My practice is esoteric by nature and is inspired by depictions of religion, Greek art, culture, and mythology. I create imagery that is depicting male figures within tropical pastoral settings that have been corrupted and I have recently been exploring hellscape imagery and representation of sin and body/animal splicing to convey my outlook on queer life as a millennial.


Angelina Foster – Artist Statement

As an artist and printmaker, I am inspired by words, stories, and symbolfrom Irelandʼs past. My passion is to foster interest in Irelandʼs words, heritage and culture and to make them available to all through accessible and engaging art experiences. My hands-on immersive workshops and art experiences give everyone the opportunity to explore their own creativity and be inspired by traditional stories and techniques. Launched in July 2022, Blueway Art Studio, my socially engaged practice is based on collaboration with groups who have a shared interest in heritage, creativity and climate action. I am a member of Wom@rts, Limerick Printmakers and Mn· na nEalaÌn Collective, I have professional membership of Visual Arts Ireland, Original Kildare, Business to Arts and of PeannairÌ,(the Association of Irish Calligraphers).

 


Joe Lane –  Artists Biography

Joe Lane is a design educator and researcher at the Limerick School of Art & Design. His role as a full time lecturer is complimented by work as a multi-disciplinary designer for a range of clients. Joe has established a letterpress print studio where he designs and prints letterpress works which have been exhibited nationally and internationally. His work explores how traditional techniques and processes can be combined with and complemented by contemporary digital methods and production methods. Joe currently sits as a Director on the Limerick Printmakers board.  

Joe Lane – Artist Statement

Joe’s practice combines digital design tools with letterpress printmaking traditions. His work is typography-led where he plays with language, form, composition and colour focusing on communication through the expressive use of wood and metal letterforms, shapes, rules, wood blocks and plates. He finds inspiration everywhere, from conversation, observation and from interactions in and with nature.


Carol Kennedy & Verona Stellet – Artist Statement

Verona Stellet and Carol Kennedy both submitted separate proposals for this exhibition. Verona’s consisted of a collage of embossed rust prints with incorporated linocut print; Carol’s was a layered monotype using eco-friendly inks. When asked by the curators to create a collaborative piece they agreed to do so — a task they undertook on a joint residency at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre in July 2022 They both found it very challenging because their initial submissions were worlds apart. However, they agreed they both wanted something that worked as a single combined piece instead of two pieces sitting side-by-side. It took a lot of discussion and debate on how to unite their two very different processes. The rust piece needed to be printed first to get an imprint on paper.  In addition, it couldn’t be reprinted again in a short time, as the plate would need time to oxidise again for the rust colours to form.

Carol found the thought of this very daunting as she works intuitively and not in such a structured manner. After Carol had laid down the first colour Verona realised that the embossed element, which was part of her work, was lost and she found it difficult to let go of what was an important part of her work. However, after some deliberation an approach was agreed, with Carol building up layer-by-layer trying to unify the work. During this slow process a mutual vision emerged which embodied Carol’s colourful approach combined with Verona’s print of a rust coloured metal disk. Eventually, they reached a point where both were fully satisfied with the piece. They learned a lot from the collaboration – not least that it is not for the faint hearted!

Carol Kennedy Bio

Carol Kennedy lives and works in Neagh, Co. Tipperary, Ireland. She works predominantly in the mediums of printmaking and photography. She graduated with an Honours Degree (distinction) in Contemporary Fine Art Printing from Limerick School of Art and Design, Ireland and a Postgraduate Diploma in Business in Cultural Event Management from Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art and Design, Dublin, Ireland. She is a member of Limerick Printmakers and coordinator of Switch Video Art Project.
Her work is inspired by experienced ephemeral moments, which she intuitively captures. She also uses feelings associated with such moments as a departure point for her work in an endeavour to make these fleeting moments more tangible. Carol has been awarded The Tyrone Guthrie Artist Residency Bursary and Professional Development Grants by Tipperary County Council. Her work has been curated and exhibited extensively nationally and internationally and features in public Collections such as Tipperary County Council and the Office of Public Works. www.carolkennedyartist.com

Verona Stellet – Biography

Verona was born in Lübeck, Germany and now lives in Newport, Co. Tipperary where she also works from her studio. She studied Fine Art/Sculpture at the Limerick School of Art and Design and graduated with a National Diploma in Art (distinction). Verona works mainly in sculpture, printmaking, mixed media, drawing and photography. She is a member of the Limerick Printmakers and Visual Artists Ireland. Her work has been shown in solo, duo and group exhibitions in Ireland and in-group shows in Germany,
the UK, Spain, USA and Hong Kong. She has been a recipient of funding from the Arts Office of North Tipperary, including an award for a solo show, the Tipperary Artist Award and a Tyrone Guthrie Residency Bursary. She has also been awarded a joint residency in the Heinrich Böll Cottage, Achill Island, by the Heinrich Böll Association. Her work is in the public collection of Tipperary Arts Council and private collections. The physicality of her practise creates a strong connection with the materials and the ability to manipulate them into new ways of expression. From coastal zones Verona collects natural, marine or other man-made debris from which she creates sculptures and installations. In her sculptural pieces this detritus attains an aesthetic quality thus creating an ambivalent confrontation between the beautiful and the repellent. Some of her print works correspond thematically with her sculptural work and echo the found material, for example marine netting, rust and plastics.


Clara McSweeney  – Biography

Clara McSweeney is a Fine Art Painting and Contemporary Practice graduate from Limerick School of Art and Design. She received the Innovation in Practice award 2020 for her degree show body of work. She is currently working as a Marketing and Tourism freelancer for The Hunt Museum in Limerick City after completing her postgraduate degree in Cultural Event Management. She is also practising as a visual artist and is an active member of Limerick Printmakers and The Darkroom Dublin. Her present achievements to date included being awarded, runner-up in The Screaming Pope Prize 2021 at K-Fest emerging arts festival, completing a two-month residency in PADA studios and gallery in Barreiro Portugal, completing a four-month graduate residency at The Darkroom Dublin and showcasing ‘Women from the Inside’ a collaborative project in The Belltable Limerick. She was awarded several artist funding awards since graduating from Limerick School of Art and Design in 2020. These include The Professional Development Award and the Agility Award from The Arts Council of Ireland. Also The Individual Artist Bursary and Grants under the Arts Act from Limerick City and County Council. Some upcoming achievements include being awarded the Venice Biennale exhibition mediator role with Temple Bar Gallery and Studios in the Irish Pavilion for November 2022.

Clara McSweeney – Artist Statement

Discovery and process are key elements in my emerging art practice. I enjoy unearthing and finding new ways to incorporate different experimental analogue photography processes in my work. Currently, I am exploring Super 8 film, cyanotype processes, darkroom development and printing and pinhole photography. “I take influence from the environments that I stumble across. I interact with dilapidated architectural spaces to give the viewers a sensation of the landscapes that I have experienced”. Abandoned or delict spaces fascinate me at the moment as I personally feel the great loss associated with these spaces after losing my childhood home in the past. Many people would find these spaces too unnerving or polluted to venture into. However, I wish to portray the hidden beauty and fascinating history nestled beneath the crumbling decay, only waiting to be discovered.

 


Suzannah O Reilly – Artist Statement

Process plays an integral part of my artistic practice; it informs why and how I make work. Fundamentally, printmaking is a series of process led techniques and applications to produce work. The application of these processes has been at the core of my work for three decades. By exploring Planographic, Relief and Intaglio printmaking techniques and by using traditional and new technological tools and materials my practice has grown and developed. In the past couple of years, I have been using cyanotype, wood blocks and monoprint techniques in my work. The wood blocks I to print from were once used as cutting matts for a router and laser cutting machine and their surface is rich in texture. By printing these boards, I am re-appropriating the marks, while also collaborating with the mark makers and their tools. For many years I have worked with others on collaborative projects and prints and this experience has led me to this current body of work where I am collaborating with myself. My younger self but my older concerns and creations, using plates and imagery from different stages of my practice and bringing them into the present.

Suzannah O Reilly  – Biography

Suzannah is a practising artist, printmaker based in Limerick and Tipperary. She studied Printmaking in the Limerick School of Art & Design (LSAD) and later completed a master’s by research at the Crawford College of Art in 2004. In 2015 she co- founded Parallel Editions, a Fine Art Publishing house in Limerick http://www.paralleleditions.ie She is a working member of the Limerick Printmakers (LP) since 1999 and was a board member for ten years (2008-2019). Suzannah teaches various printmaking techniques in LP and is a lecturer in printmaking at LSAD. Process plays an integral part of her artistic practice; it informs why and how she makes her work. Her own practice in print has led her to work in collaboration with different organisations and disciplines promoting and expanding printmaking methodologies and practices. She has experience in curating and organising exhibitions most notably taking Plan A & Plan B, a collaborative exhibition from LP members to Impact 9 in Hangzhou China 2015.
Other exhibitions   she has been part of are Impressions Biennale, GMIT, Galway. (2010, `12, `15, `16) Synergy, Bourne Vincent Gallery, University of Limerick.(2014)  RE Open Exhibition, Bankside Gallery, London.(2012) Never never be an Artist,  The Source Arts Centre, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.(2012)   Matrix, Graphic Studio, Dublin. (2010) EVA+ 2003 selected by Virginia Perez- Ratton. Her work can be found in many private and public collections including the Limerick City Gallery of Art, OPW, Tipperary Co. Council, Limerick City Council, and Regional Hospital Limerick. UL and the Hunt Museum. http://www.printsor.ie


 

Clodagh Twomey – Artist Statement

Clodagh Twomey is a Designer and Printmaker living and working in Limerick.
She is a member of Limerick Printmakers and lectures in Design at the Limerick School of Art & Design, TUS. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally and is part of private and public collections.

Title: Presence and Recognition

Medium: Cyanotype, Silkscreen and Pencil

This work explores the experience of being present in a landscape. The metaphor of the Archimedean Twin Circles is used to describe the need to maintain a balance between a sense of place and the artist’s reflections on a landscape. While moving through a location, horizons change, perspectives alter
until that moment of recognition occurs and the image is captured.

Title: Place

Medium: Cyanotype on Cotton

This cyanotype was created in response to an exploration of landscape, the work was made using a combination of plant material and digital negatives.


Isabella Walsh Artist Statement

I approached the sacred mountain seeking answers. I walked away contemplating my place in the universe – the insignificance of the individual in terms of geological time. To the gods we are but insects… Analog photography is a psychological investment in the future – patience and delayed gratification are intrinsic – often weeks pass before I see any results. It is a deeply meditative process. I use old medium format cameras in particular because I like how the older lenses compress space. The film in this instance was sent home from the Canary Islands by lorry in a metal box subjecting it to extremes of temperature and humidity, the likely cause of the extra sparkle in the images.

Image A is Tindaya, a mountain sacred to the Mahos, indigenous people of Fuerteventura. It is Trachyte, a different type of rock to the rest of the island. There are apparently hundreds of ancient carvings of feet on the slopes and the summit, all pointing toward the biggest active volcano on Gran Canaria where they believed the devil lived. Signs at the base request that visitors respect their cultural heritage by not going up, which I obeyed.

Image B is of a small colony of insect dwellings, possibly some kind of native wasp or bee and made from clay which I discovered near the base of the mountain, and my foot.

Isabella Walsh Biography

Isabella Walsh (b.1983) is a multidisciplinary artist from Co. Limerick, with a BA(hons) in Fine Art Printmaking from Limerick School of Art and Design. She has held solo exhibition was in Limerick City Gallery of Art (2017) and Gallery Interlude, Limerick (2018). Isabella has collaborated on residencies in the Park Kiosk, Limerick (2015), The Arba Minch Art Project, Southern Ethiopia (2015, 2016) and Occupy Space – Seattle (2016). She is represented in the OPW and the University of Limerick collections. Isabella is a member of Contact Studios, and is currently based in Wickham St Studios. She also works as a sculptor and prop modelmaker in the film industry.

My artistic practise has two main branches – solitary and social. I respond to the people and places I encounter, the experiences I have, intuitively and sensitively. I enjoy creating art objects, particularly through drawing, printmaking and photography. I also enjoy working with others, collaborating on art projects, facilitating events and teaching. The process of exchange that takes place can sometimes create long lasting connections between people. I am fascinated by storytelling, in visual, oral and literary forms. Time, place and human intervention on the environment are also central tropes in my work.

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Mutators – Kevin Mooney https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/mutators-kevin-mooney/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/mutators-kevin-mooney/#respond Mon, 12 Sep 2022 08:44:51 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7342

Mutators – Kevin Mooney

Opening Reception Saturday October 1st at 1pm.

The MART Gallery, 190A Rathmines Road Lower, Dublin 6.

Exhibition Runs 1st – 21st October | Wed-Sat 1-6pm 

 

The MART Gallery is delighted to present Mutators, a solo exhibition by Kevin Mooney, in partnership with Sample Studios Cork and supported by The Arts Council of Ireland.  

Kevin Mooney is a Cork based artist and member of Sample-Studios. His work considers the voids which mark Irish visual culture, particularly related to Irish diasporic traditions and journeys. His paintings are like haunted tales- sometimes they are inventions, tall stories which present as artefacts from a lost culture and sometimes speculative imaginings of an alternative art history.

For Mutators, his solo exhibition in MART, curated by Sarah Kelleher, his work will expand from wall-based works to sculptures and hybrid painting/ sculptural objects. The materials of this new work- oil paint, varnish, timber, clay, jute, and iron nails, draw on the remnants of Irish folk art and folklore, blending them with influences from Europe and further afield. His ongoing research interests in historical connections between Ireland and the Caribbean has been a rich source of inspiration. This body of work reimagines artefacts that might have resulted from an integration of peoples with a shared but divergent transatlantic history.

Curator Sarah Kelleher notes in her essay in the forthcoming major publication on Mooney’s work: “His works splice recognisable Irish motifs with devices more readily associated with ritual imagery or tribal fetishes to concoct a mutant, absurdist folklore…. Mooney’s paintings are revenants, ghosts of lost futures, where we are haunted not by the spectres of an Irish visual tradition, but by its absence.

www.kevinmooney.org

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Sleeping Dogs Lie – Kata Kukla https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/sleeping-dogs-lie-kata-kukla/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/sleeping-dogs-lie-kata-kukla/#respond Mon, 15 Aug 2022 15:10:23 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7304

Sleeping Dogs Lie – Kata Kukla 2022

Opening 8th September 6-8pm

Runs: 6th – 9th September 2022 I Tuesday – Friday I 1-6pm

The MART Gallery, 190a Rathmines Rd lower, Dublin 6, D06 R9F9

www.mart.ie

 

MART Gallery & Studios are delighted to announce ‘Sleeping dogs lie’, a solo exhibition by artist Kata Kukla, curated by Ewa Pypno.

 

The old adage ‘Let sleeping dogs lie’ suggests that it is often best to leave unresolved problems undisturbed as awakening these issues can trigger additional pain.

Sleeping Dogs Lie tells a holistic story of its subjects, chipping away at the veneer which we present to the world to expose the underlying elements that bolster our personalities and identities.

Through a combination of portraiture and collage which is informed by an extensive investigative process Kata Kukla creates work that reaches past the physical to encompass time, emotion, identity and trauma resulting in an all embracing collection of work.

Kukla’s pop-up exhibition moves from paintings of tiny objects which are keystones to a personal identity to surrealist landscapes which depict formative moments.

 

About the Artist:

Kata Kukla is a Dublin-based multidisciplinary artist born in Poland. Her artistic practice spans the fields of painting, design and print. Kata’s work examines social construct, human identity, historical landscape combined with various motifs and symbolism.

She graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Poland where she majored in painting and screen-printing. She has been exhibited regularly since 2010 in Europe and in America. Recently selected exhibitions include: Baton Rouge, LA & Juxtapoz, USA (2022), Saatchi Art, The William Vale Hotel, Brooklyn, USA, (2021), Culture Night Guinness Storehouse x First Day Gallery Dublin (2021), Mart Gallery, Dublin (2020), Art+, Cieszyn, Poland (2019 Solo), Solvay Centre for Modern Art, Cracow, Poland (2018 Solo).

Website: www.katakukla.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kata.kukla/ 

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Future Forward – QSS https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/future-forward-qss/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/future-forward-qss/#respond Fri, 15 Jul 2022 11:13:13 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7282

Future/Forward – QSS

MART Gallery presents Future/Forward – An exhibition of new and collaborative work by artists from QSS, Belfast. 

Curated by: Jane Morrow.

Runs: 13 August – 2 September 2022

Location: MART, Old Fire Station, 190A Rathmines Road Lower, Rathmines, Dublin 6, D06 R9F9

Featuring: Alacoque Davey and Sharon McKeown, Amanda Coogan and Sharon Kelly, Amy Higgins and Michelle McKeown, Andrew Haire, Catherine Davison and Rachael Colhoun, Angela Hackett and Anushiya Sundaralingam, Anushiya Sundaralingam and Mary Cosgrove, Ashley B Holmes and Naomi Litvack, Charlie Scott, Craig Donald and David Haughey, Clare French and Grace McMurray, Frédéric Huska, Joy Gerrard and Vasiliki Stasinaki, Gail Ritchie and Meadhbh McIlgorm, Gerard Carson and Gerry Devlin, Jennifer Trouton and Rachel Lawell, Kwok Tsui and Pauline Clancy, Majella Clancy, Sinead McKeever and Niamh Clarke, Mark McGreevy and Susan Connolly

Kindly supported by The Arts Council of Ireland and Arts Council of Northern Ireland

Download the exhibition handout here.


Exhibition Statement 

Future/Forward is a long-term programme and series of exhibitions initiated by QSS Studios & Gallery, Belfast. This presentation contributes to a broader exhibition strand by MART, which invites artist-run organisations, studio groups and independent curators from across the island of Ireland to share their work with new audiences and to develop networks with peers throughout the country. This exhibition is the third consecutive configuration of Future/Forward, and the first to feature all 35 participating artists in the same space. Parts 1 and 2 took place between 2 – 23 June and 30 June – 28 July 2022 at QSS in Belfast. 

 

These collaborative groups and pairings were brought together over the course of over 80 studio visits conducted with QSS artists – initially with individuals, and subsequently with pairs/groups – between July 2021 and April 2022. Future/Forward was originally conceived in-house at board level, as a way for QSS members to proceed ‘bravely and gravely’ following the inaccessibility of infrastructure, materials and resources during what Kuba Szreder describes as the ‘forced suspension’ caused by Covid-19. 

 

This period has not been without struggles for artists globally, and those based in QSS are no exception: artists who are unable to be in their studio regularly, who had to sub-let their spaces due to the lost income or opportunities, and those who were simply apprehensive about sharing their ideas, practices, and vulnerabilities with other artists at a time when everything outside the studio was already so unsettling. Future/Forward has aimed to galvanise and re-form the QSS studio community, enabling the generation of new, experimental work, enhancing supportive peer relationships, and offering an opportunity to focus on process and exchange as essential and beneficial elements in the development of an artist’s career and practice.  

 

From a curatorial perspective, my involvement is an extension of my work across network and production contexts, and through creating formal and informal developmental platforms for practitioners. Resourcing, nurturing and profiling others’ practices has been a longstanding facet of my approach. Future/Forward also complements my PhD research, which focuses on the precarity of artists’ studios in Belfast. The arguments made throughout are for increased recognition and value for artists’ work and workspaces, and their unique offer within the infrastructure, as well as enhanced support and funding resources, and modes of practice – including collaboration – that offer artists collective forms of resistance and repair. 

 

My departure points for each pair or group were a series of key words – extracted from notes that I’d taken during the individual studio visit process – and a rationale for the collaboration, which aimed to generate discussions between the artists. Whilst QSS artists are working at different career stages, with varying levels of experience, and working in different disciplines, I emphasised the necessity for equal and reciprocal contributions. The process was designed to be supportive and explorative; envisaged as an opportunity to experiment with ideas or approaches that sat outside their standard modes of practice.

 

The focus for this series of exhibitions is not on finished work. I encouraged the participating artists to focus on the process of coming together in their collaborative pairs and groups, finding value and significance in ephemeral things: their texts to one another, fragments of their exchanged materials, documentation of their work in progress, or snaps of things posted under closed studio doors. These things are the fabric of a collaborative activity, speaking much more to the integrity of artists’ working methods. The work produced has naturally coalesced around some universal concerns for practitioners: materials, language, objects, time, identity, and rituals. But what is most interesting is where this work, these artists, and their ideas will go from here. 

Jane Morrow – May 2022

 


ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES. ALPHABETICAL BY SURNAME.

 

Gerard Carson

Gerard Carson’s practice is concerned with the contingency of matter in the context of accelerated modes of technological production, ecological breakdown, and the indeterminate vectors of their effects/affects. By working via a speculative methodology, Carson’s works take the form of precarious assemblages comprised of bio-plastics and concrete, where computer modelling and 3D printers act as techno-symbiotic agents in the assemblage’s manifestation. He has exhibited throughout Ireland, UK, and China. He has also been a recipient of the Frank Bowling Scholarship Award, which supported his MA Fine Art studies at the Chelsea College of Art. Carson is also a graduate of the Ulster University School of Art & Design. He has acted as a mentor to recent graduates from the Chelsea College of Art and has curated a number of exhibitions at ACAVA Maxilla Studios & Space. Carson is a former co-director with Platform Arts Gallery & Studios.

 

Majella Clancy

Born in Co. Leitrim Majella Clancy completed an MFA at Ulster University (2006) and later completed a practice led PhD (2012) that examined gendered space through paint and print practice. Recent exhibitions include: How the Image Echoes, PSSquared, Belfast (2019), Impact 10 International Printmaking Conference, Santander, Spain (2019). Forthcoming group exhibitions include Munsterland Print Festival, Kloster Bentlage, Rheine, Germany (2019), Artmill Gallery, Plymouth (2019). Recent publications include: Clancy, M. Felmingham, S. ‘Meshwork, Correspondence and The Middle Voice’, in Impact 10 Print Publication, Centre for Fine Print Research (UWE), Bristol (2019). Forthcoming publications include: Clancy, M. Felmingham, S. ‘Drawing Out: Encounter, Resistance, Collaboration’ in Drawing Research Theory Practice, Intellect, UK, (2019), Clancy, M. ‘The Thinking I: Self, Materiality and Paint Practice’, in Teaching Painting: A Publication, Cambridge Scholar, UK, 2019.

 

Pauline Clancy

Pauline Clancy was born in Co. Leitrim and studied BDes (Hons) Visual Communication at the National College of Art and Design (NCAD), Dublin, 2006, before completing her MFA in Multidisciplinary Design (Graphic Design) at Ulster University, Belfast in 2013. She is currently a PhD researcher at Ulster University. Her work explores the materiality of language through typographic form and is primarily realised through the medium of screenprinting. Process and materiality play an important role in her approach to making, while finished artefacts are important, the experimental and making process is of equal importance, where the process can also become an outcome. Current typographic research involves working with a number of processes and materials including interactive approaches to screenprinting. She has exhibited her work nationally and internationally. Recent group exhibitions include Highlanes Gallery, Drogheda (2020); Rua Red Winter Open, South Dublin Arts Centre (2020); Disorder/Disruption, Ulster University Gallery, Belfast (2019); and Empreinte International Print Exhibition, Luxembourg (2017). Upcoming exhibitions include Posted/Unposted, Malmø Art Book Biennale, Sweden and Impact 11, Hong Kong. She is a member of the International Society of Typographic Designers (MISTD) and was awarded a Society of Typographic Arts (STA)100 Award as part of the 100 best examples of Typographic Excellence in 2019 (USA). Her work is held in collections including Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum, Wisconsin, USA and Manchester Metropolitan University, Special Collections of Artists’ Books.

 

Niamh Clarke

Niamh’s practice centres around drawing, but also includes written prose, watercolours and super-8 video, which she would describe as expanded forms of drawing. Her practice reflects an interest in memory and temporality. Exploring the relationship between photography and drawing, a focus is placed on the embodied presence of gesture and materialisation through re-description of found and personal photographs. Niamh uses images intuitively to create an implied narrative, in an attempt to materialise thought, bodily references or emotion. Influenced by Virginia Woolf’s phenomenological and embodied prose and conflation of nature and the human condition, landscape and natural form is dominant. Niamh is a recent graduate of Fine Art from Ulster University.  She is a co-founder and member of the collaborative drawing group The Drawing Journal.

 

Rachael Colhoun

Born in Northern Ireland, Rachael Colhoun graduated from Ulster University Belfast in 2018, with a degree in Fine Art Painting. Her work explores the merging together of juxtaposing landscapes, touching on personal childhood memories of frequent relocation between Northern Ireland and New Zealand. Travel has heavily influenced Rachael’s visual language, helping to explore the ideas surrounding alien landscapes, fragmented spaces and displacement. Rachael’s approach is abstract and non-representational, instead focussing on the emotional feeling created by place. The aim is to challenge how visual imagery is perceived, encourage audiences to ask “How does the image make me feel?” rather than simply “what is it meant to be?”. Her Degree show work has been exhibited in several galleries including the Engine Room Gallery, The Gallery at Whitehead and Queen Street Studios. Additionally, her work was longlisted for the 2018 RDS exhibition in Ireland, as well as one of her paintings being selected for the annual RUA exhibition in the Ulster Museum Belfast. Rachael is currently being represented by Canvas Galleries in Stranmillis Belfast. 

 

Susan Connolly

Susan Connolly is an artist based in Belfast. She makes paintings and large-scale installations which explore the notion of uncertainty in painting and its ability to remain relevant in our digital age. The work references the history of abstract art and reflects on and challenges the medium itself. She holds a practice based PhD (2018) and an MFA (2002) from Belfast School of Art and a first class hons Masters from NCAD(2013). Connolly has exhibited extensively on the island of Ireland with recent commissioned work exhibited at the FE McWilliam Gallery (2020), the Golden Thread Gallery (2018), CCA (2018) and the MAC, Belfast (2014). Her work is held in many private and public collections, with the Arts Council of Ireland recently acquiring a major large-scale work. Other noteworthy career achievements include receiving funding from the Arts Council of Ireland (2021), Culture Ireland funding to exhibit at Kunsthaus Dalhlem, Berlin(2020), and her selection to particate in the Golden Foundations artist residency programme, New York (2017).

 

Amanda Coogan

Amanda is an internationally recognised and critically acclaimed artist working across the medias of live art, performance, sculpture and installation. The Irish Times have said, ‘Coogan, whose work usually entails ritual, endurance and cultural iconography, is the leading practitioner of performance in the country’. Her extraordinary work is challenging, provocative and always visually stimulating. Using gesture and context she makes allegorical and poetic works that are multi-faceted, and challenge expected contexts. She is one of the most dynamic contemporary artists practising in live art.

The body, as a site of resistance, is the centrality of Coogan’s work. She encompass a multitude of media; Objects, Text, moving and still image, all circulating around her live performances. Her expertise lies in her ability to condense an idea to its very essence and communicate it through her body. Time is a key material in Coogan’s practice, building controlled instability into the fabric of her work. The long durational aspect of her live presentations invites elements of chaos with the unknown and unpredicted erupting dynamically through her live artworks. Coogan was awarded the Allied Irish Bank’s Art Prize and has extensively presented and performed her work, including at The Venice Biennale, Liverpool Biennial, PS1; New York, The Whitworth Gallery; Manchester, The Museum of Fine Arts; Boston, Van Gogh Museum; Amsterdam and the Manchester International Festival; The MAC, Belfast; The Golden Thread, Belfast; The Niemeyer, Aviles. She delivered two large-scale live art exhibitions in the National Gallery of Ireland and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Jacksonville in late 2018. Her 2015 live exhibition; I’ll sing you a song from around the town, was described by Artforum as ‘performance art at its best’.

 

Mary Cosgrove

Mary Cosgrove was born in Belfast and was first trained in painting and drawing by T.P. Flanagan RHA, RUA. She taught in government schools in Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) and Zambia for seven years, illustrating school material and government history courses while continuing to paint. She returned briefly to Belfast and taught in further education and illustrated pamphlets and magazines. She did life painting with Errol Lloyd at Camden Arts Centre in London. From there she went on to study art and design education at London University with Stanislaw Frenkiel and Alfred Harris. This led to the study of art history and theory at Middlesex University and the University of Essex with Prof. Lisa Tickner and Prof. Dawn Adès and others.

With the help of a British Academy scholarship, she completed her doctorate at the University of Ulster specialising in 20th century Irish art. She has contributed to academic journals and catalogues in Ireland and USA. She taught Art History at Queen’s University and life drawing at The Crescent Arts Centre for many years, organising the annual students’ exhibition and curating major loan exhibitions at Cultúrlann MacAdam Ó Fiaich, Belfast. Her work is held in private collections in Africa, England and Ireland.

 

Alacoque Davey

Alacoque Davey was born in Newry, studied Fine Art at Liverpool John Moores University (BA Hons 1990-1995) and returned to Ireland to complete her MA in Applied Art at University of Ulster (1998-2000). Since then she has lived and worked in Belfast joining Queen Street Studios in 2003. She has always worked across several disciplines producing both 2D and 3D work. The paintings, works on paper and assemblages often represent ‘rooms’ or ‘homes’, which can relate to actual architectural facades, plans and interiors or internal imagined spaces.

 

Catherine Davison

Born in Castlereagh, Catherine Davison received her BA honours in Fine Art from the University of Ulster in 2001 and completed a postgraduate course at Leith School of Art, Edinburgh 2005. Since graduating Davison has been a member of Queen Street Studios in Belfast and has received a number of awards from the N.I. Arts Council through the individual artist award programme. Over the years Davison has taken part in a variety of group shows from Cork to New York and with each solo exhibition her practice has grown. In 2015, Davison received support from the British Council through their International Residency Program Award to be an artist in residence at Largo das Artes for one month in Rio de Janeiro. This experience has influenced and formed the basis of her current work.

 

Gerry Devlin

Gerry Devlin’s work operates in a space between formal abstract investigation and a psychologically charged visual enquiry. Essentially self referential, the paintings nonetheless incorporate both a contemplative and oblique visual narrative in deploying images of fragments, objects and motifs from the commonplace, to the personal, to the museum artefact. The paintings explore and reflect notions of individual and collective memories and histories without recourse to anatomical confines, infusing inanimate forms with a sense of human loss, fragility, and resilience. He has exhibited his work nationally and internationally, including enderesky Gallery Belfast; Naughton Gallery, Queens University Belfast; Sligo Art Gallery; Ormeau Baths Gallery Belfast; Emerson Gallery Washington USA; Resurgam Gallery Baltimore USA; Claremorris Prizewinners, Ireland; Monaghan County Museum; Crescent Arts Centre, Belfast; Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York; Munsen-Williams-Proctor Art Institute, New York. Gerry has taught on the Foundation Studies in Art & Design programme at Ulster University since 2004. His work is held in the collections of Arts Council of Northern Ireland; Queens University Belfast; Office of Public Works, Dublin; Munsen-Williams-Proctor Museum of Contemporary Art, Utica New York; Monaghan County Museum, Ireland; Craigavon Area Hospital, N Ireland; St Louise’s Comprehensive College, Belfast; and in private collections in Ireland and the USA.

 

Craig Donald

Donald’s work deals with our understanding and interpretation of the past. History and memory are dismantled and recombined to form layers of meaning, opening a forum to examine the systems and boundaries of visual communication.  This is investigated with particular reference to the means of collection, interpretation and dissemination of information; with an emphasis on human attempts at control and the areas where these can fail. He works with painting, drawing, collage, found objects and installation – each medium bringing its own historical and material connotations. Current areas of focus include tensions between contemporary and historical methods of information storage, retrieval and presentation.  Also, a blending of the political and the personal, with more familiar or popular images from history decontextualised and reimagined. The relative democratisation and accessibility of information exchange through the increasing expanse of the internet, combined with its incorporeality, leads to a situation where we must piece together our own story of the world using the best qualitative judgement we can muster.

 

Clare French

Clare’s practice considers the (impossible) human desire for meaning. Her works operate as poetic objects that elicit a slow, engaged looking and affective response in the viewer.  The insistence on minimal, repetitive systems expand, and intensify audience attention, raising questions about making and meaning and communicating the impossibility of the finite or the absolute. Her treatment of surfaces index Clare’s decisions and actions, reference art historical conceptions of making and expose broader hierarchies of labour, making and materials.  Clare’s work develops according to semiotic systems, which are then disrupted through employing materials in repetitive, labour-intensive and time consuming ways; generating the unexpected and facilitating crucial ‘happy accidents’. Clare works episodically and in series to further democratise and multiply meaning.

She graduated with a first-class BA in Fine Art from City & Guilds of London Art School in 2018. She previously received a first-class MA in Social Anthropology from Goldsmiths College. During her Fine Art BA, Clare was shortlisted for the David Ballardie Memorial Travel Award and the Artists Collecting Society Award and was selected to participate in The Worshipful Company of Painter-Stainers, Decorative Surfaces Paint Technique Practical Workshops.

 

Joy Gerrard

Joy Gerrard lives and works in Belfast, and graduated with an MA and MPhil from the Royal College of Art, London. Gerrard is known for multimedia work that investigates different systems of relations between crowds, architecture and the built environment. Her studio practice investigates protest crowds and occupation of urban spaces, archiving media images from the Brexit and Trump Resistance, Occupy movement, Arab Risings and many more. Exploring the historical and iconographic qualities of these images, her work (re)presents them in detailed pen and ink drawings, and more recently large ink works on canvas. Recent solo exhibitions include ‘put it to the people’, Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast, ‘shot crowd ’at the Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin (2017) and Protest Crowd, Peer UK, London (2015). Selected group exhibitions include: Moving Spaces, Glucksman Gallery, Cork (2020), Irish Art, Sothebys. London (2020),  Protest and Remembrance, Alan Cristea Gallery, London (2019), In a Dream You Saw A Way To Survive and You Were Full of Joy; Hayward Gallery Touring show (2016) and Contemporary Drawing, Xi’an Academy of Fine Arts, China (2015). She has installed multiple public installations since 2004 including major works in the London School of Economics (Elenchus/ Aporia, 2009) and Chelsea and Westminster Hospital (Assemble/Move/Map, 2012).

 

Angela Hackett

Angela completed a BA Hons in Fine Art from the National College of Art & Design in Dublin in 1994 and an MA in Contemporary Visual Art at University College Falmouth in 2005. She is an associate member of the Royal Ulster Academy. Angela has received numerous awards and bursaries from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, Arts Council of Ireland and Culture Ireland. She has twice been a prize winner at the Royal Ulster Academy Annual Exhibition; winning the 2019 Perpetual Gold Medal and the Ulster Arts Club Prize 2004. Angela was shortlisted for the Jerwood Drawing Prize in 2005 and was an invited artist at the annual Royal Hibernian Academy exhibition in 2002. She has been exhibiting her work in group shows nationally and internationally for many years. Her work is held in public collections such as the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, Department of Finance, Northern Ireland, the Office of Public Works Irish Government Collection, as well as private collections in Ireland and abroad.

 

Andrew Haire

Andrew Haire is an artist who currently lives and works in Belfast. His work explores the traditional subject matter of landscape painting viewed within the context of our modern and ever increasingly digital society. He completed a BA Honours in Fine Art gaining a first-class degree from the University of Ulster in 2013. In the same year he was awarded the Royal Ulster Academy Outstanding Student Award and a year as artist in residence at the University of Ulster. Haire has appeared twice on BBC NI’s The Art Show and recently was a finalist in Northern Ireland’s Young Artist of the Year. Since graduating he has exhibited regularly including group shows at The Engine Room Gallery, Queen Street Studios, PS2 Gallery and The Waterfront Hall. He has had solo Exhibitions at Ards Arts Centre, Newtownards. He was recently awarded an Arts Council of Northern Ireland SIAP award and is developing a new body of work.

 

David Haughey

David Haughey is an artist living and working in Belfast. David successfully defended his PhD thesis in April 2021, where his research explored time and the image in the context of expanded fine art practices, with a particular focus on video and the exhibition. His research and practice has defined a space between the conventions of painting, photography, cinema, installation and digital media. As a teacher, lecturer and tutor with more than 15 years’ experience, David has worked with students of all ages, teachers, and technical staff and is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. He has shown work in Venice, at La Casa Di Corto Maltese (2011), as well as the Royal Ulster Academy Annual exhibition (2014), and at Void Gallery, Derry, in an exhibition curated by Turner Prize winner Mark Wallinger (2015). David presented a solo exhibition of painting titled “According To Our Historians A Meteorite Fell Hissing” at The Ulster University Art Gallery during January and February 2017. 

 

Amy Higgins

Amy Higgins has a BA Hons and Masters of Fine Art awarded by Ulster University. Higgins received a distinction for her Masters degree wherein she developed ideas around Barbara Creed’s Monstrous Feminine and Hannah Arendt’s notions around the Human Condition. Her work has made a recent shift into the idea of a metaphysical place and the awareness of position in viewing the artwork. As a painter, dark palettes continue to be used but with a new interest into how colours can be employed.

 

Ashley Holmes

Ashley Holmes lives and works in Belfast. She studied Fine Art in the USA and obtained a BFA in Painting from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston, and an MFA in Painting from the University of Colorado in Boulder.  She also holds a Master of Arts from Chelsea College of Art and Design in London. She has exhibited widely in Northern Ireland and abroad. Past exhibitions include EV+A, “A Sense of Place” curated by Klaus Ottmann 2007, and 134 & 135 Royal Ulster Academy Annual Exhibitions in 2015 & 2016,“The Danforth Museum Art Annual”Massachusetts, USA. “Birth of a Nation,” Ning Space, Beijing, China and “Identity,”Emerging Arts Research Centre Beijing, China 2016. Her most recent solo show in 2018, “Shadowpattern, curated by Francesca Biondi was shown in The Island Arts Centre Lisburn, Northern Ireland. Her works is held in both private and public collections including The Bank of Ireland and The Royal Victoria Hospital.

 

Frédéric Huska

Originally from France, Frédéric studied at the Royal College of Art, before completing a PhD with Practice at Ulster University in 2015. He is currently a lecturer on the BA (Hons) Photography with Video, and MA Photography. His current artwork explores the multi-layered connections between the self, history and the architecture of the city, with photography, writing and film. It aims to re-map urban spaces intuitively and libidinally, hence mediating notions of time and duration within the construction and spectatorship of photographic representations. Issues that are related to historiography, such as the process of abstraction and exteriority, are addressed and challenged through a longing – and ultimately failure – to reach out to unfathomable histories. In its conception, his work mirrors the paradoxical nature of melancholia in which the object-loss is primordial and yet unknown, and it dwells on the contradictory movements emerging through the inner violence embedded in the architectural fabric of the city. Frédéric is also a long-term resident at Fire Station Artists’ Studios in Dublin.

 

Sharon Kelly

Kelly’s practice has taken the intersections between art, life, health and sport, exploring ideas of bodily interiority, emotional states, and the mind / body synergy utilising various media and surface. Her work has included large scale drawing installations, stop motion animation and video. Kelly’s current work deals with the potentially unsettling confrontation of the fragmented, broken body; issues of healing, perseverance and notions of liminality, time and transformation. She has undertaken numerous collaborations with poets, writers, dancers and choreographers. In 2017 she was co-initiator and developer of a multimedia dance production, with Maiden Voyage Dance Company, creating the visuals for Landscapes of Loss, exploring the territory of grief over time.

Sharing creative practice is a significant element of her work and she has been involved in numerous exploratory projects in the field of education across Ireland with children and teachers. Between 2011 – 2019, she was Virtual Artist in Residence, St Patrick’s Primary School, Crossmaglen, Co Armagh, Kids’ Own Publishing Project, Virtually There, using video conferencing software as creative platform for exploring and communicating. She has been the recipient of numerous awards including Arts Council of Northern Ireland Visual Arts Awards; Rowel Friers Perpetual Trophy; The Drawing Prize 132nd Royal Academy Exhibition, 2013; The Bass Ireland Award 2001; British Council Award 1999; EV+A Open Award, Adjudicator, Jan Hoet, Belgium 1994; First Prize, ‘Siolru’, RHA Gallagher Gallery, Dublin 1994; Alice Berger-Hammerschlag Trust Travel Award 1991; The Elizabeth Greenshield Foundation, Canada 1990. Kelly’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally since 1990 and is held in public and private collections in Ireland and further afield. In 2020, she was awarded the Arts Council of Northern Ireland Fellowship at The British School at Rome.

 

Rachel Lawell 

Rachel Lawell is an Irish visual artist specialising in Fine Art painting. Lawell graduated from Belfast School of Art with a BA Honours Degree in 2016 and went on to study a Master’s degree at Queens University Belfast in Film and Visual Studies (2017) where she graduated with Commendation. Since graduating, Lawell has consistently exhibited throughout the UK and Ireland. Lawell’s work is highly influenced by film and the portrayal of the female form in cinema, especially from the old Hollywood era. Her work is motivated by nature and spontaneous vivid colour use. Her work is held in a number of private collections in the UK and Ireland. 

 

Naomi Litvack

Naomi Litvack‘s artistic practice is concerned primarily with landscape; exploring layers of history, the concept of the monumental and human mark making through time. The primary sources of research material and imagery in Naomi‘s work are personal experiences of landscapes visited and explored. Themes of isolation, stillness and modern society’s tenuous connection to nature pervade her painting. Ideas of memory, passing by, flashes of encounter, light, time and weather are all present. Naomi aims through her practice to present landscape as something timeless and ethereal, yet also tangible. She completed a BA in Painting at Manchester School of Art in 2014 and an MFA in Fine Art at Belfast School of Art in 2018. She was 2018-19 Artist in Residence at St Mary’s School, Calne, and curator of the Flax Gallery at Mossley Mill in 2019-20. Naomi has exhibited widely both nationally and internationally, and has been the recipient of prizes and accolades including the University of Ulster Broadening Horizons Travel Grant and the Leonard James Little Award for Painting at Manchester School of Art. She has been shortlisted for Bloomberg New Contemporaries and Saatchi New Sensations. Her work is held in various private collections.

 

Mark McGreevy

Mark McGreevy is a graduate of Ulster University, Belfast. He has had exhibitions at The MAC, Belfast; VISUAL, Carlow; The Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Dublin; The F.E. McWilliam Gallery, Banbridge; The Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast; RHA, Dublin; Fendersky Gallery, Belfast; The Lab Gallery, Dublin; The Third Space Gallery, Belfast; The Crawford Gallery, Cork; Katzen Art Centre, Washington, DC; Draiocht, Dublin; Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast; The Glucksman, Cork, among others. McGreevy is the recipient of many awards including the Suki Tea Prize, a number of Arts Council of Ireland Bursary Awards, and Arts Council NI SIAP award. He has been shortlisted for prestigious art prizes such as The AIB Award and BOC Emerging Artist Award and has participated on artist residency programmes at Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris; the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin; The Ballinglen Arts Foundation, Mayo and previously held a membership studio at Temple Bar Gallery and Studios, Dublin. His work is held in both public and private collections.

 

Sinead McKeever

Sinead McKeever is based in Belfast. In 2008, she received a distinction in MA Fine Art from Ulster University in 2008. McKeever’s installations address hybridity, as pigment, both paint spatial occupation and application. Her developing practice engages with different modes of perception, the questioning of hierarchical systems of measuring, knowledge and history are interpreted through drawing, painting and sculpture in the expanded field.

 

Michelle McKeown

Michelle McKeown is currently undertaking doctoral research in painting and feminist theory at Ulster University. Her recent practice operates at the intersection of painting and digital printing technologies. Born in Northern Ireland, McKeown studied at the National College of Art and Design, Dublin (1998 – 2001) and the Royal College of Art, London, (2005 -2007). Awards include the Basil H Alkazzi Scholarship 2005-2007 and Artist-in-Residence Award from 2007-2008 at Loughborough University School of Art & Design. Solo Exhibitions include The Seeress, Marian Cramer Projects, Amsterdam, 2013, The Realm of the Mothers Marian Cramer Projects, Amsterdam, 2011, Michelle McKeown @ Storage, The Agency Gallery, London, 2009, and Strange Attractor, Loughborough University Gallery, 2008. Selected group exhibitions include Progressions, Ulster University Gallery, Belfast, 2019; Femocracy, Marian Cramer Projects, 2016, 2Q13 Lloyds Club, London, 2013; Journey, Millennium Court Arts Centre, 2013; Waar ken ik u van? Leiden University, The Netherlands 2013.

 

Sharon McKeown

Born in 1994 in Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland. Sharon McKeown graduated from Ulster University, Belfast (2018) with a BA Hons Fine Art in Painting where she was presented with the Cool Banana Award 2018 by Streetmonkey Belfast. In addition to her degree, she studied at Saimaa University of Applied Sciences, Finland (2017) receiving a Diploma in International Academic Studies. It was here that she had her first solo show ‘Unknown Ventures’ exhibiting at the Linnala Campus, Imatra. Since graduating she has become a Co-Director at Platform Arts Belfast and exhibited at Woolwich Contemporary Print Fair, London (2018), QSS Gallery, Belfast (2018), and the RUA Annual Exhibition, Belfast (2018-19).

 

Meadhbh McIlgorm

Meadhbh McIlgorm is an artist with a material practice, working across mixed-media. Originally from Dublin, Meadhbh has been living and working in Belfast since 2015. She studied Craft Design and History of Art at the National College of Art & Design in Dublin, specialising in glass. Her work is influenced by phenomena that move beyond the tangible – in particular, the ephemeral nature of light, shadow, and reflection. The unique qualities of glass, including its fragility, lend themselves to creating a narrative around these phenomena through sculptural objects, installation and photography. She received DCCoI Future Makers Student Award (2013) and has shown work in several national group exhibitions including the RDS Craft Awards, Sculpture in Context (2014), ‘Solas’ (Dublin, Cork, Limerick and Waterford, 2015/16) and The Ireland Glass Biennale (2019-20). Meadhbh also has a curatorial practice, most recently focusing on a series of Belfast-wide intervention projects (2020 – 2022) under the titles Liminal Spaces and Limin-Alley. She also served as a Co-Director of Platform Arts. 

 

Grace McMurray 

Grace McMurray reconstitutes ideas of drawing and traditional craft methods through the relationship between the digital and the handmade.  Employing geometric patterns and symmetry to construct a soothing familiarity, the ostentation of the work strives for visibility. The objects exude order and purpose but it’s a performative wellness to distract from the illusion of control. Through this deeply personal work reflexive upon the spaces they occupy and exist in, McMurray finds beauty in the underside, the exposed edges and the overlooked.  As such, creating textile installations symbolising the private sphere of the domestic. Such labour-intensive work unravels notions of social conditioning, gendered labour and its value. Grace is a member of Array Collective, winners of the 2021 Turner Prize. With Array, Grace has exhibited at Jerwood Space, London (2019), The Herbert Art Gallery & Museum, Coventry (2021), and has a forthcoming exhibition at Galway Arts Centre in August 2022. As an individual artist, her work has been exhibited at University of Ulster, Belfast; CCA Derry (2021); Royal Academy Summer Exhibition (2019); Jerwood Drawing Prize, London (2015); Synthetic Aesthetics, Leitrim Sculpture Centre, Ireland (2012); and Hong Kong Visual Arts Centre, Hong Kong (2010). 

 

 

Gail Ritchie 

Gail joined QSS in 2003. She is currently undertaking a PhD with practice at Queen’s University, Belfast and she continues to explore themes of memory and memorial in relation to conflict. A solo exhibition of Gail’s practice-led Doctoral research will take place at The Naughton Gallery, Belfast, in June 2022. She has recently presented her research at conferences in Newcastle, London and Edinburgh. Gail has exhibited extensively throughout Ireland, the UK and internationally, including Katzen Center for Arts (Washington DC), APT Gallery (London), WhiteBox Gallery (New York), InterArt Gallery (Beijing) and Hangzhou Public Library (China). She has undertaken residencies at the British Institute of Archaeology (Ankara, 2019), Ulster Museum (Belfast, 2013), Rooftop Studios, Prinzlauerberg (2010) and Centre Culturel Irlandais (Paris, 2009). Alongside her artistic practice, Gail also practices as a curator, working on exhibitions of Northern Irish art in Mexico (2004), Valencia (2005) New York (2006) and Tokyo (2007). In 2016, she co-curated Irish Wave projects in Beijing and Shanghai, followed by curated a group exhibition on the theme of conflict (Platform Arts, 2017) and took part in the B#War Festival in Treviso, Italy in March 2019. She has received awards from Arts Council Ireland Ireland, Arts Council Northern Ireland, Cultural Relations Committee and the British Council.

 

Charlie Scott

Charlie graduated from the Belfast School of Art with First Class Honours in 2017. His work has recently been purchased for the Arts Council of Northern Ireland permanent collection and the Northern Ireland Civil Service Collection. Recent exhibitions include What Fell From The Mountain, Ards Arts Centre Newtownards (Solo), QSS Gallery, and the Royal Ulster Academy. In 2017, following Scott’s degree show, he was awarded the Royal Ulster Academy Award for Outstanding Students, the Art at The Clayton Award and QSS Gallery Award. He was also appointed Artist In Residence for Fine Art at the Belfast School of Art (2017/18). Scott’s paintings are rooted in time and nature, often gravitating towards spiritual or metaphysical responses to landscape. Growing up surrounded by the silent bogs, lakes, and halted railway lines below Mount Errigal in Co. Donegal; he combines fragments of memory, natural elements and human impulse as a means to reconstruct time. Scott values the tactile nature of oil paint as one that parallels the experience of nature, utilising painting as an excavation process to uproot and uncover imagery.

 

Vasiliki Stasinaki

Vasiliki is a Belfast-based artist, activist and dance-performer interested in social and political issues, within the context of history, national identity and immigration. Through her work, she attempts to question and explore her place in the world from a social and political point of view by creating performative interventions that take place in a defined space. Vasiliki works in sculpture, textile and print to create installations and site-specific pieces that centre the audience. She recently performed ‘ΣΥΝΗΘΩΣ ΔΕΝ ΣΚΕΦΤΟΜΑΙ ΤΟ ΜΕΡΟΣ ΑΠ’ΟΠΟΥ ΚΑΤΑΓΟΜΑΙ (Most of the Time I Don’t Think About Where I Come From)’ as part of The Druithaib’s Ball, Array Collective’s 2021 Turner Prize winning performance-video-installation.

 

Anushiya Sundaralingham

Originally from Sri Lanka, Anusihiya has lived and worked in Belfast for twenty-seven years. Since graduating from University of Ulster in 1998 with a BA Hons in Fine and Applied Arts, Anushiya has been a full-time artist, working with a range of media including print, textiles, papercuts, painting and installation. Her work is influenced by the challenges of identity and the nature of belonging. Previously, this has taken form through a range of subject matter, themes and media to convey the complexities of people, place and conflict. Anushiya also practices as an arts facilitator for various public, private, and health organisations. Her work is represented in numerous private and public collections.

 

Jennifer Trouton 

Jennifer deliberately uses the tools and materials of the past, such as figurative painting and still life, to subtly express ideas around gender, class and identity within Irish history. Her work combines an interest in the mythological and historical with the personal stories and meta-narratives of women. Since graduating from the University of Ulster in the mid-nineties Trouton’s work has been extensively exhibited both nationally and internationally. Throughout her career, Trouton’s work has garnered numerous awards, including the Golden Fleece award, the Clare Morris Open Exhibition, the RHA Keating/McLaughlin award and the RUA Watercolour Prize. She has been awarded residencies in New York, Los Angeles, China, Canada and Ireland and her work is held in numerous private and public collections 

 

Kwok Lam Tsui

Kwok graduated from Ulster University with first class honours in June 2020, upon which he received a 12-month graduate studio bursary from QSS. Since graduating, he has participated in ‘Emergence IV’ (QSS, June 2021), ‘BA/MFA Fine Art Graduate Show’ (The MAC, September 2020) and ‘The Portrait of Northern Ireland’ (Golden Thread Gallery, October 2021). He has received funding from University of Atypical, and in 2020 was awarded a residency with PS2. He is currently Exhibitions Coordinator at Cultúrlann McAdam Ó Fiaich. Kwok’s paintings incorporate graphic and abstract elements which explore the spaces between analogue and digital, surface and content, recognition and abstraction. His work is informed by ambiguous identities, including his own, and the ambiguities of space, form, memory, and interpretation. He works at scale, setting limitations for each work or series such as a limited colour palette, or the specific direction of brush strokes. 

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Lucid – Aoife Bambury https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/lucid-aoife-bambury/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/lucid-aoife-bambury/#respond Mon, 27 Jun 2022 10:51:29 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7269

Lucid – Aoife Bambury

MART are delighted to invite you to the opening of ‘LUCID’, a solo exhibition by artist Aoife Bambury, on Saturday July 16th at The MART Gallery Rathmines from 1pm. 

The exhibition will run Wed-Sat 1-6pm until July 29th. 

 

About the Artist:
Aoife Bambury is a Kildare based contemporary visual artist and sculptor, whose current practice is focused on modernist sculpture using bronze as the core material. 

Utilising her interest in popular culture, pop art and the designer toy movements, Bambury’s work includes abstracted elements from the animal world. Her work is mostly connected to the figurative, and is intended to convey reactionary responses connected to our subconscious.

Through her process and working of the bronze her work can take on the appearance of different materials, and at first glance could be manufactured from vinyl or another plastic. This alchemy of how we view the objects around us is core to Bambury’s work as an artist.  She continuously experiments with deeply contrasting patinas and with lacquer, and high gloss finishes on bronze. She wants to highlight the clash between high art and high street, and how these lines become blurred in the works of artists that she admires such as KAWS, Sterling Ruby and Murakami.  

Aoife has studied at post graduate level at N.C.A.D. and at Crawford College, CIT, Cork. She learned bronze casting techniques during extended study periods in Burkina Faso, West Africa. Originally from Kerry and currently lives and works in County Kildare. She is an emerging artist and her work has been included in many group shows over the past few years, such as Sculpture in Context, CIACLA (Contemporary Irish Arts Centre Los Angeles) and the annual exhibitions at The Royal Ulster Academy. 

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Memory Loss – MART’s Annual Awards Exhibition 2022 https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/memory-loss/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/memory-loss/#respond Thu, 26 May 2022 17:21:51 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=7183

Memory Loss – MART’s Annual Awards Exhibition 2022

Opening June 11th at 1pm – The MART Gallery, 190A Rathmines Road Lower, Dublin 6 

Runs June 11-24th | Wed-Sat 1-6pm 

MART is delighted to present our Annual Exhibition Award 2022 on June 11th at 1pm at The MART Gallery Rathmines, featuring artists Tuqa Al Sarraj, Gerard Daly and Alisha Doody. 

The opening will feature a live performance and paintings by Tuqa Al Sarraj, an installation by Alisha Doody and new work by Gerard Daly. The artists’ work focuses on memory loss, shared experiences and identity.

This annual exhibition aims to provide a showcase and support opportunity to artists whose work is both engaging and experimental, through three partnerships; Tuqa Al Sarraj was selected from the MART / Fingal Graduate Award call out in 2021 and successfully received a 1 year studio at MART studios alongside curatorial and financial support for the exhibition, Gerard Daly was selected as a recent graduate of MTU Crawford College of Art and Design, and Alisha Doody was selected from Fire Station Artists’ Studios Digital Media Award. 

The exhibition has been curated by Matthew Nevin and Ciara Scanlan and supported by the Arts Council Ireland,  The MART Gallery & Studios and our three partners Fingal County Council, MTU Crawford College of Art & Design, Cork, Fire Station Artists’ Studios.

Poster Image Courtesy of Tuqa Al Sarraj

About the Artists:

Tuqa Al Sarraj is a Dublin based multidisciplinary artist. she studied Fine Art media at the National College of Art and Design (2021). Al Sarraj has also previously studied contemporary art at the International Academy of Art Palestine (IAAP), Ramallah (2017). Her practice combines mixed-media, found objects, collage, photography, video, performance and installation. More recently, she has been navigating themes of memory, loss, and exile through social dialogues and personal conversations. Tuqa has exhibited as part of group exhibitions in Oslo, London, Ramallah, Creil, Dublin and Limerick. – www.tuqasarraj.com 

Gerard Daly In my work I try to express the connection between significant events in life and the everyday. This can be any event, from a change in situation, to an event like a death or a loss, or a joyous occasion like a wedding or a birth. My work is mostly done in weave, either on a loom or a frame. This is to signify how our lives intertwine with the events that shape and influence us. Emotions are shown using the colours associated with those feelings within the weave structure. Artworks are produced using aran weight cotton, commercially produced, and where necessary fixed to 6mm metal rods for shaping and for hanging. www.instagram.com/gerdaly_artistic_notions

Alisha Doody is a visual artist with a socially engaged practice whose work combines solo and collaborative research methodologies. Through photography, moving image and installation her work explores the role of mentorship and history in relation to identity development specifically within the LGBTQI+ community. Recent awards include the Firestation Digital Media Practice Award 2022, Next Generation Artist Award 2021 and Artist in the Community Research and Development Award 2020. Recent Exhibitions include How to Live Here in Halfway to Falling by Kate O Shea – Lord Mayors Pavillion Cork 2021, The Everywoman Project By The Stairlings Collective – National Museum of Ireland Collins Barracks, Dublin 2020. www.alishadoody.com 

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Textile Tensions – Eleanor Lawler https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/textile-tensions-eleanor-lawler/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/textile-tensions-eleanor-lawler/#respond Tue, 26 Apr 2022 19:41:31 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=6999

Textile Tensions – Eleanor Lawler

The MART Gallery Dublin proudly launched ‘Textile Tensions’, a retrospective exhibition of Eleanor Lawler one of Ireland’s most exciting performance Artists, on May 14th 2022, featuring a screening of her video work ‘The Invisible Woman’ and live performances by Catherine Barragry and Conor Coady.Gallery Rathmine

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Exhibition Run: May 14th – June 3rd | Wed-Sat 1-6pm 

 

The exhibition celebrates the artwork of Eleanor Lawler, who passed away in 2019. Over several decades Eleanor reached across communities, audiences and artists to become a well regarded figure in contemporary art in Ireland. Eleanor endeavoured to create a space of support, development and care for performance artists and their practice through her curatorial work with Livestock a Performance Art Platform. Through her own work she developed, created and showcased critically acclaimed works and performances in Ireland, Europe and the USA. Her work continues to speak to audiences through her teachings, imagery, videography and sculpture. This exhibition showcases a selection of Eleanor’s work through image, film and associated live performances. 

 

The exhibition will also see the launch of a limited edition Artist Catalogue documenting the performance history of Eleanor Lawler and featuring a retrospective text by Dr. Katherine Nolan.   – Pre Orders available to purchase by emailing info@mart.ie

 

The exhibition, catalogue and performances have been curated by Ciara Scanlan, Katherine Nolan, Francis Fay, Matthew Nevin and Lorcan Lawler.

 

About the Artist: Eleanor Lawler

Eleanor Lawler’s work concerned ideas around domesticity, being female and the ageing body. Her artwork manifested as performance, curation, textiles, movement, installation and film. Since 2001 she showcased and performed work across Ireland, Europe and USA. Her film work has been shown in Liverpool Biennale, Whitechapel Gallery and as part of “Visual Deflections” in 2008/9. Eleanor was an associated artist of the MART Gallery and Studios in Dublin from 2010-2019 with which she exhibited nationally and internationally and which continues to support the legacy of her work, launching a studio residency in her name and a retrospective exhibition in 2022. 

Eleanor participated in the Butoh & Live Arts Moving Bodies Festivals in 2016-2017, which included a residency in Turin, Italy. Her film The Invisible Woman, was shown at LACE Gallery in Los Angeles in 2018 and in 126 Gallery Galway as part of Diffraction in 2020. As a curator she focused on supporting emerging artists by building a strong environment of support and mentorship. She co-curated the performance art platform Livestock with Francis Fay since 2011 and was an Assistant Director at Dublin Live Art Festival for 2013-2015. She held a BA Fine Art from DIT, Dublin and an MA in Textiles from Goldsmiths College, London. Eleanor died in 2019 from ovarian cancer. She is deeply missed and completely irreplaceable. 

http://eleanorlawlerartlover.blogspot.com/ 

 

About ‘The Invisible Woman’ Film

“ The Invisible Woman (2016). In this video, the naked figure of a woman in her 60s emerges from a cottage, pausing beneath a stone lintel. The crumbling forgotten homestead, like the aging female body is invisible, of no consequence: Its fabric breaking down, past its best, and no longer a site of bountiful re-production. This work mobilises the politics of representing the aging female body, which unlike the figure of the wise male sage, signifies the grotesque (Fuchs 2019: 12). This gendered trope is tasked with bearing the fear of the failing body and the horror of its mortality. Throughout the video, the figure emerges, gazes into the distance and then recedes in haste, as if being found out for the taboo revelation of a body that is no longer considered worthy of the (sexualized) gaze. This performance critically engages the female body as signifier of the dominant Western “decline ideology” of aging (Fuchs, 2014: 71). This off the cuff performance was a powerful articulation of Eleanor’s lived experience of aging as a woman. ”   – Katherine Nolan 

– Fuchs, E. (2019) ‘Going Transchron: From the Sublime of Age to Juvenescence’, Performance Research, 24 (3), pp. 9-12,

– Fuchs, E. (2014) ‘Estrangement: Towards an ‘Age Theory’ Theatre Criticism’, Performance Research, 19(3), pp. 69-77.

 

Eleanor Lawlers work in her own words:

“I have an ongoing independent practice making films for inclusion in installation/interventions within galleries or as individual pieces in their own right.  My films are made using the camera as an accomplice exploring ideas of implausible games played out within the home. The digital methodologies I use in recording performance encounters are effective instigators of intimacy.  The installations created use the architecture of the gallery to engage the viewer, who is asked to physically compromise themselves in order to see the work. The camera in my work is a device used as an uncritical companion, as both audience and actor. My work explores sites where performance and intimacy, architecture and the visceral collide. Using the camera as an accompanying intimate, I perform behind it, scanning domestic spaces like cupboards, wardrobes, or under the bed.   I explore private places, places to be private, hiding places and finding places, playing out strangely cathartic games. When a home becomes a place of performance, the necessity for intimacy could become a search through implausible spaces, a playground for the actor and the audience alike”

Kindly Supported by MART Gallery Dublin and The Arts Council of Ireland. 

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MART Studios Members Exhibition 2022 https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/mart-studios-members-exhibition-2022/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/mart-studios-members-exhibition-2022/#respond Tue, 15 Feb 2022 11:11:19 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=6953

MART Studios Members Exhibition 2022

MART STUDIO MEMBERS EXHIBITION 2022

Opening Reception Saturday 5th March at 1pm.

Runs March 5TH – 16th

Open Wed – Sat: 1-6pm

 

MART HX Gallery, MART HX Village Studios, 18A Greenmount Ln, Harold’s Cross, Dublin, D12 C953

 

For our annual Studio Members Exhibition, the Directors of MART Ciara Scanlan and Matthew Nevin are delighted to present a curated selection of Visual Artists working in our studio network in Dublin.

 

Featured Artists:

Andrej Getman, Attention Attire x Recreate, Billy Dante, B. Lucey, Burnell McKenna, Carmen Quigley, Ciara Furlong, Colette O’Connell, David Herlihy, Deirbhile Seville, Derval Tubridy, Eamon Cassidy, Gavan Duffy, Gráinne Bath Enright, Kevin Judge, Malú Colorín, Maura Culbert, Michael Bruce Weston, Oleg Brazhnyk, Paul McCarthy, Peter Donnelly,  Sarah Edmondson, Sarah Walsh, Scott O’Sullivan, Sheila Flaherty, The Ljilja.

 

Overview on MART Studios:

MART is the largest supplier of independent, affordable space for the arts, cultural and creative community in Dublin city. We now support over 120 members in 6 studio buildings across Dublin. MART firmly believes in the self-determining artist and art organisation as vital societal and cultural catalyst. It is also a provocation on the role of action in the production of identities; individual and collective, local and global. Constructing culture as action, this framework asks artists to reflect not on what art is, but what art does. With this in mind, creative and conceptual risk-taking is proposed as a key strategy in the production of knowledge that can lead to the possibility of being self-determining. Supporting the professional development of our artists is a key part of our remit. Our artist members work across a diverse range of practices which encompasses painting, sculpture, print, drawing, illustration, digital art, photography, film and performance art. Providing the members with an opportunity to exhibit their work publicly gives MART a chance to showcase the expanse of artistic output we support while also allowing the artists to raise their profile, widen their access to audiences and sell their work.

This exhibition has kindly been supported by The Arts Council of Ireland.

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Culture-Chats https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/culture-chats/ https://mart.ie/portfolio-item/culture-chats/#respond Fri, 16 Jul 2021 08:53:28 +0000 https://mart.ie/?post_type=portfolio-item&p=6671

Culture Chats is a round table discussion that intertwines cultural and social conversations with performance; while delving into the minds of some of the leading contemporary voices in Irish culture. 

For full details on the series, including the podcast and videos with subtitles check out the main Culture Chats page on CIACLA’s website.

Episode 1 – Performance & The Spectacle

The first episode features musician Erica Cody, writer Felispeaks, visual artist MASER, DJ/Broadcaster Tara Stewart and musician James Vincent McMorrow discussing the spectacle and performance, with the discussion led by Matthew Nevin.

Through an accessible and free flowing conversation the panel of artists, musicians, writers and actors discuss their creative processes, artistic drives, performative anxieties and triumphs while intercutting performances and examples of their work.

Episode 2 – Contemporary Disciplines

For Episode 2 Matthew Nevin chats with an exciting lineup; featuring multidisciplinary artists Niamh Hannaford and Day Magee, award winning director Eamonn Murphy, composer Ruth O’Mahony-Brady and internationally renowned singer Chloë Agnew.

The chat showcases and celebrates these artists’ work, while discussing the highs and lows that come with a career in the arts. The conversation moves across artistic disciplines and provides an insight into how these artists are paving the way to create and develop a modern arts scene in Ireland.

Episode 3 – Sustaining a Career in the Arts

For Episode 3 Matthew Nevin hosted a discussion focusing on sustaining a career in the arts in Ireland. Matthew chatted with some of Ireland’s most successful artists, including internationally renowned artists Amanda Coogan, playwright and director Philip McMahon, writer and journalist Una Mullally, Actor and writer Paddy C. Courtney and award winning choreographer and performer Philip Connaughton.

All of whom over their creative careers have made important contributions and impact into the development of Contemporary Irish culture. The conversation covers the highs and lows of working in the arts, tips for their peers and focuses on the journeys that led them to gaining international recognition. 

Episode 4 – Irish in Los Angeles

Episode 4 was filmed on location at Building Bridges, Bergamot Station Arts Center in Santa Monica, and features: Olivia Tracey, an established actress and one of Ireland’s most distinguished models, Kirsten Sheridan is an Irish film director and screenwriter, Sonya Macari Devlin an entrepreneur and actress and Jenn McGuirk an actress, singer, voice over artist.

Matthew Nevin hosted a discussion with Irish Creatives living in Los Angeles on how the they have found success, the ups and downs of their experiences of working in LA and advice for anyone looking to follow in their footsteps.

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