NATIONAL YOUTH COUNCIL OF IRELAND – 1916 Proclamation Youth Project

I have been invited by NYCI to collaborate on this Youth Arts project. I have a pretty good working knowledge of print from my days working as a graphic design consultant with Jevons Brown in London, so this should be really interesting.

In the Spring of 2016, the National Youth Council of Ireland, with the support of the National Print Museum, are working with two Youth Groups, local to the Museum, on a project centred on the 1916 Proclamation. The project involves young people being introduced to the history of the Proclamation by the staff and volunteer printers at the National Print Museum. A member of NYCI will introduce the groups to a toolkit, which will engage the young people in the idea of being a citizen and their notions about the country they would like to live in. Subsequent to this engagement, each youth group will produce their own proclamations. Once produced an artist will work with each youth group to create and design the proclamation posters.

The Youth Groups involved in the project are from St. Andrews Resource Centre, Pearse Street and the Ringsend and Irishtown Community Centre. 

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This project is supported by Dublin City Council’s 1916 Rising Commemoration Fund.

Lots to see at RHA

One of my stops on Culture Night in Dublin was the RHA. Great music, great exhibitions.

Really loved the drawings and stone carvings in the foyer by Michael Quane. Drop in to see them if you get a chance. 

Upstairs is inhabited by performance artist, Amanda Coogan at the moment and the Ashford Gallery's show is Gary Coyle's 'Into The Woods'. Beautifully worked, dense charcoal drawings. 

Michael Quane

Michael Quane

Amanda Coogan

Amanda Coogan



Storytelling Workshop in Collaboration with Art Historian Jean Ryan

Yesterday was the last in a series of workshops I undertook in collaboration with Art Historian Jean Ryan in Dublin Castle. The sessions organised by Temple Bar Cultural Trust and Dublin Castle ran over the summer. The workshops began with Jean telling the story behind an artwork from the Castle, sometimes historical, sometimes modern. Having heard the story the participants were passed onto me where they were encouraged to create an artistic response to the piece. Only after this were they allowed to see the piece itself. 

The sessions were wonderful. Some of the responses were drawings and paintings but some were  literary and even books. When we finally encountered the featured piece, it was with a much greater insight into the work.

One of the wonderful responses from yesterday.

One of the wonderful responses from yesterday.

  

Humans Too - Homelessness Awareness Art Exhibition

Fri 20th March, DCU Business School 3rd Floor, 6-8pm. Lord Mayor of Dublin Christy Burke will open the exhibition. Continues Sat 21st Mar 11-4pm

'Black & White II' Floor based Acrylic Line Drawing on Paper - 2.5m x 1.75m

'Black & White II' Floor based Acrylic Line Drawing on Paper - 2.5m x 1.75m

I especially love my own bed. The crisp white sheets, plump duvet and it's feeling of security. Like most other people I take it for granted. Here my attempt is to coax the viewer into an internal dialogue. The floor drawing is on white paper. It will be installed where people will walk on it. Come along. You're welcome to try sleeping on it!

Meet the Gibney's

The Chapelizod Hoarding has a new artwork addition. These ladies lived in the 'Gambles' tenements buildings. The buildings, behind the hoarding, are now derelict but they once stood four stories high with large granite steps up to the doorways. This image is from the 1930's. The Gibney's were one of many families that once lived there. Chapelizod is the oldest village in Dublin.

Farmleigh - Children's 'Dereliction' Art Workshop

What a great to spend a Sunday afternoon. The weather was kind and the Cow Shed Gallery was packed! Thanks to the mums and dads for bringing such an awesome bunch of kids along and getting creative with them.

Chapelizod 'Dereliction' at Farmleigh Cow Shed Gallery - Official Opening

The exhibition Chapelizod 'Dereliction' was officially opened by Minister Simon Harris on Thursday night.


I was really thrilled with the reception the work received and am hugely proud of all the people that contributed their time and energy to the project.

To see it all in one place is fantastic. As I said on Thursday evening this was very much about the process rather than the outcomes but it's wonderful to see the outcomes get such a great response! 

The exhibition is open Thursday to Sunday 10am-5pm until November 23rd.



Lest We Forget - The Gambles, Chapelizod (Dereliction)

When I settled in Chapelizod 10-12 years ago the heartbeat of the village for me was the Villager Pub and what I knew to be Paul's Shop or Kelly's. 

Paul's shop was a greengrocer, craft beer treasure trove before hipster beards and craft beers were anything like ubiquitous, sweet shop, general store and a daily news digest.

Kelly's shop, Main St. Chapelizod

I guess I noticed the building that housed Paul's was gradually decaying but was genuinely surprised and saddened when Paul was left with no choice but to call time on a business that his father had originally started some 50 years before.

Kelly's Shop Main St. Chapelizod, gone but not forgotten.

The building to the immediate right of Paul's is almost completely gone now and it's history is fascinating. Known as The Gambles, a 500 year lease was originally granted in 1694 by Sir John Temple. Although originally a single structure it was subsequently divided into separate dwellings.

The Gambles buildings were tenements which fell into disrepair and were boarded up by the late 1950's. Several of the families housed there were rehoused in the then new council housing estates in Ballyfermot. 

Among those that lived in the Gambles buildings were Dominic Bolton, so-named as a foundling baby discovered on the corners of Dominic St. and Bolton St. in Dublin and Maggie & Mrs. Gunning. (see below)

Mrs. Gunning was well known for leaning on her window sill and for never being short of a kind word.

Chapelizod Dereliction boards from the Gambles hoarding.
Mrs. Gunning still making friends at the Gambles building, Chapelizod. How would she feel about this?

When I started the "Dereliction' project this year I had no idea that several of the buildings in question were about to be auctioned. The Gambles building was the subject of a compulsory purchase order by Dublin City Council and I'm grateful to them for their co-operation and support in allowing me to utilise the hoarding (that had to go up for health and safety reasons) in the project. 

Maggie and Mrs. Gunning are coming down for a few weeks and will be housed in the Cow Shed Gallery in Farmleigh for the Chapelizod 'Dereliction' exhibition between the 6th-23rd November. They will be back though and will eventually be joined by these fine ladies.... members of the Gibney family who were also Gambles residents at one time.

Members of the Gibney family. Chapelizod 'Dereliction' hoarding at the Gambles building.

I do wonder what the future holds for sites like these and I'm worried that their stories may be lost. I've always loved the shabbiness of Chapelizod, the character, the edges.... and the people. I suppose new stories will have to be written....

Members of the Gibney Family, residents of the Gambles buildings, Chapelizod.
Chapelizod Main St.



Childrens 'Dereliction' Workshop

Childrens 'DERELICTION' WORKSHOP
Ages 6-12 years. 

Explore dereliction and the impact that it has on our neighbourhood through this creative workshop.
May get messy! Come early as numbers will be limited.

Cowshed Gallery, Farmleigh, Phoenix Park, Dublin

Sun 16th November 2-4pm

kids-chapelizod-dereliction-workshop


My Own Experiences Of Art In Health

My painting 'Shoes Come In A Box, People Don't' was featured last week in this Irish Times article   about Headspace Magazine. HeadSpace is a creative writing and art magazine based around the theme of mental health. I think the painting and it's title are pretty self explanatory.

'Shoes Come In A Box, People Don't'

It made me think again about my own experiences having produced work for some of Ireland's hospitals & care facilities over the last few years. 

I was forced, while conceiving & producing the work, to consider very carefully the impact it might have on patients, their families and the staff of these facilities.

Below is a commission I did for The Hermitage Clinic in Dublin. The rising figure depicted over 5 canvases represents the journey from sickness to recovery and was intended to gently encourage hope and ultimately, well-being. The colours and weight of line are deliberately chosen so as not to be overbearing but suggest a lightness of spirit.

Shortly after, I became aware that I was reacting to that process through some of the personal work I was doing. I was surprised by the rawness of the resulting paintings. I was in fairness, also responding to a crisis of my own brought on by acute & extended homesickness. I felt genuinely anguished to the point it was having a physical effect on me. (Thankfully that's now resolved!)

These paintings are not self-portraits but certainly are autobiographical and the entire process felt very cathartic. I'm eternally grateful to my model Caroline Baker for understanding implicitly what was required. Raw, naked emotion. Plug for her: She makes awesome music! Check her out here 

While there isn't much debate around the capacity for art to effect us emotionally and intellectually, either while creating or appreciating it, I am also really interested in the physical impact it can potentially have. 

In her excellent blog post from earlier this year, Artfetch co-founder Patricia Tsouros, links to this Youtube clip. As she points out, it's all about the Dopamine!

While in this post from the same source there is a suggestion that artists are more prone to suffering mental health issues, I can happily report that I'm as far from slicing my own ear off as I could hope to be!

The very act of making art is the one thing, more than any other, that inspires, delights, challenges and motivates me to examine, explore and express my view of the world around me.
In short it nourishes me....

Art is therapeutic.

Finally, here is Art Dublin a great Dublin exhibition listing site. Now get some therapy!


Exhibition Opening - Chapelizod 'Dereliction'

Official Opening:

Thursday 6th November at 7.30pm.
This is a free, ticketed event.... You can print your ticket here: Chapelizod Dereliction - Invitation


I've had a fantastic nine months working on a community arts project in my own village of Chapelizod.

You can find out more about the project here or at Facebook here

It's been a wonderful experience to engage with so many people but sadly it's coming to an end. I'm really excited however to announce the upcoming exhibition that will bring the project to a close.

The exhibition is a chance to display some of the work produced by myself and the various participants in response to Chapelizod's derelict historical buildings.


Chapelizod Dereliction Invite

 

 

Seattle Pop Art Show - David Hockney MIA

Some fantastic work on display at the Seattle Art Museum & while I'd love to go I do think it's odd that a retrospective pop art show doesn't include David Hockney. To me he's just fundamental to the original movement. Still some amazing work. The show is reviewed here.....

http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2024738018_sampopdeparturesxml.html?syndication=rss

Catharina Manchanda, Seattle Art Museum Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, explains the thought behind artist Mickalene Thomas' work, "Hair Portrait."

Catharina Manchanda, Seattle Art Museum Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, explains the thought behind artist Mickalene Thomas' work, "Hair Portrait."

Mexican artist Margarita Cabrera's "Vocho (yellow)," a mixed media piece of hand-stitched vinyl, batting, thread and car parts depicting a VW Bug.

Mexican artist Margarita Cabrera's "Vocho (yellow)," a mixed media piece of hand-stitched vinyl, batting, thread and car parts depicting a VW Bug.

Artist Jeff Koons' "Pink Panther" (1988) is on display.

Artist Jeff Koons' "Pink Panther" (1988) is on display.

RHA - Drawings

Getting ready to go live with the new website last week gave me a chance to have a good look back at some of the work i've done over the last few years. 

RHA School 2011 - Life Drawing 1

Naturally i thought some of the work was pretty good and some of it, not as much. 

RHA School 2011 - Life Drawing 2

I did find these drawings from a life-drawing week I did in the RHA a few years ago and really quite like them. I'm sure they're tucked away in a portfolio somewhere.  

RHA School 2011 - Life Drawing 3

I remember getting more & more confident as the week went on.

RHA School 2011 - Life Drawing 4

And becoming leaner & meaner with my mark making.... Note to self: do some life-drawing.

RHA School 2011 - Life Drawing 5