Artist’s Talk this Thursday: Stéphanie Nava

Stephanie Nava will give a talk on her work at 2pm this Thursday 12 March at Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane. The artist will discuss her project, Considering a Plot (Dig for Victory), an installation based on the history of allotment gardens and government programs encouraging citizens to grow their own food during World War II. An extract of the work, called Garden Cities or Urban Farming? The Crises Bureau, is currently on view in the exhibition, Phoenix Rising: Art and Civic Imagination, which continues at The Hugh Lane until 29 March 2015.
The talk is free and no booking is required, although early arrival is recommended as places are limited.
With the support of the French Embassy in Ireland.

Stéphanie Nava, Garden Cities or Urban Farming? The Crises Bureau (detail), 2011-14; An extract from Considering a Plot (Dig for Victory); installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist ; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Stéphanie Nava, Garden Cities or Urban Farming? The Crises Bureau (detail), 2011-14; An extract from Considering a Plot (Dig for Victory); installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist ; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

View Online: Take a deep breath now by Mary-Ruth Walsh

Mary-Ruth Walsh’s film, Take a deep breath now, which is included in the Phoenix Rising exhibition, can now also be viewed online at https://vimeo.com/120976392.

Mary-Ruth Walsh, still from Take a deep breath now, 2014. © the artist

Mary-Ruth Walsh, still from Take a deep breath now, 2014. © the artist

The film takes inspiration from the botanist cum city planner Patrick Geddes. Mary-Ruth Walsh writes: “His use of numerous lenses, the microscope and camera obscura contributed to a rich textural view of a city and a multilayered way of seeing cities and planning.” Take a deep breath now is dedicated to Norah Geddes, Patrick’s daughter, who in Dublin’s inner city “changed derelict slum sites into playgrounds through skill and tenacity.”

Phoenix Rising in Architecture Ireland

Fergus Browne and David Jordan review Phoenix Rising: Art and Civic Imagination. Read the full article on the Architecture Ireland website.

Sense of Place Walking Tour

Images from the first Sense of Place walking tour on Thursday 19 February 2015.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour in the Garden of Remembrance, programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour in the Garden of Remembrance, programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour in front of photographs by Eamonn Doyle on O'Connell Street. The tours were programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour in front of photographs by Eamonn Doyle on O’Connell Street. The tours were programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour on Dominick Street, programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour on Dominick Street, programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour on Parnell Square, programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Orlaith Ross leading a Sense of Place walking tour on Parnell Square, programmed in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh in relation to the Phoenix Rising exhibition.

Upcoming Events

Sense of Place Walking Tours

A series of FREE walking tours has been programmed with Orlaith Ross from Making Space in conjunction with Mary-Ruth Walsh, whose work is included in the Phoenix Rising exhibition. Tours leave from the gallery at 2pm on the following dates: Thursday 19 February, Saturday 28 February (FULLY BOOKED), Thursday 5 March and Saturday 14 March. Join Orlaith Ross in an exploration of the local area connecting the work inside the gallery to the city outside.

Book online at https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/sense-of-place-walking-tour-with-orlaith-ross-in-conjunction-with-the-phoenix-rising-exhibition-at-tickets-15614145329.

 

Leaf Dublin Skyline 2015 web

© Mary-Ruth Walsh

 

Satellite Image Capture Event with Cliona Harmey

12:30-4:15pm, Saturday 28 February

FREE drop-in event for all ages exploring the technology behind the artist’s installation, Fixed Elsewhere.

For timetable details see: http://www.hughlane.ie/lectures/lectures-past/1290-live-satellite-image-capture-event.

 

Coffee Conversation with Stephen Brandes

11am, Wednesday 4 March

Join the artist for a talk followed by tea or coffee in the café to allow for further discussion. Fee €5 at the Gallery Reception.

 

Artist’s talk by Stephanie Nava

2pm, Thursday 12 March

Hear the artist discuss her project Considering a Plot (Dig for Victory), an extract from which is on view in Phoenix Rising. FREE. With the support of the French Embassy in Ireland.

 

Phoenix Rising: Art and Civic Imagination continues to 29 March.

Sense of Place Walking Tours

A series of FREE  walking tours has been programmed with Orlaith Ross from Making Space in conjunction with the exhibition, Phoenix Rising: Art and Civic Imagination. The walks will begin at Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane and explore the local area around the gallery. They will take place at 2pm on 19 and 28 February and 5 and 14 March. Booking essential: https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/sense-of-place-walking-tour-with-orlaith-ross-in-conjunction-with-the-phoenix-rising-exhibition-at-tickets-15614145329

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The tours will respond to the work of Mary-Ruth Walsh, which is included in Phoenix Rising. The tours aim to further engage the audience with the city and encourage participants to re-imagine and investigate how the city has evolved. Each tour will be a meander through the locality with information provided along the way. Join Orlaith, who will lead the tour, as the tour extends what’s inside the gallery to the city outside.

Mary-Ruth Walsh, still from Take a Deep Breath Now (2014) © the artist

Mary-Ruth Walsh, still from Take a Deep Breath Now (2014) © the artist

Phoenix Rising: Installation Views at The Hugh Lane

Cliona Harmey, Fixed Elsewhere, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Cliona Harmey, Fixed Elsewhere, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Mark Clare, La Fontaine du Réalisme, and Le Fantôme du Réalisme, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist ; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Mark Clare, La Fontaine du Réalisme, and Le Fantôme du Réalisme, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist ; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Stéphanie Nava, Garden Cities or Urban Farming? The Crises Bureau (detail), 2011-14; An extract from Considering a Plot (Dig for Victory); installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist ; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Stéphanie Nava, Garden Cities or Urban Farming? The Crises Bureau (detail), 2011-14; An extract from Considering a Plot (Dig for Victory); installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist ; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Vagabond Reviews, Scientia Civitatis: Missing Titles, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artists; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Vagabond Reviews, Scientia Civitatis: Missing Titles, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artists; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Mary-Ruth Walsh, Take a deep breath now, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Mary-Ruth Walsh, Take a deep breath now, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Mary-Ruth Walsh, Hanging in the eye or 53.35˚N, 6.26˚W (1), 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Mary-Ruth Walsh, Hanging in the eye or 53.35˚N, 6.26˚W (1), 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Stephen Brandes, Civic Committee, 2014; installation view, Church Street, Dublin

Stephen Brandes, Civic Committee, 2014; installation view, Church Street, Dublin

Stephen Brandes, Per Laborem, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Stephen Brandes, Per Laborem, 2014; installation view, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane © the artist; photograph by Ros Kavanagh

Films Online

While the Phoenix Rising January film programme has concluded, several films from the programme are available online.

The Singing Street, 1951, courtesy of the Scottish Screen Archive

The Singing Street, 1951, courtesy of the Scottish Screen Archive

The Singing Street by Nigel McIsaac, Raymond Townsend and James T. Ritchie can be viewed courtesy of the Scottish Screen Archive.

Monuments and Tame Time by Stina Wirflet are also available on Vimeo:

Missing Green by Anne Maree Barry

In conjunction with the exhibition, Phoenix Rising: Art and Civic Imagination, a series of films has been programmed on Saturday afternoons during January 2015. The programme includes Anne Maree Barry’s film Missing Green, filmed on Cork Street, Dublin 8. The artist, who is currently in residence at the Liaison of Independent Film Makers of Toronto , answered some questions from Exhibitions Curator, Logan Sisley, ahead of the screening of the film at The Hugh Lane on 31 January.

Missing Green (2013) is a poetic journey through Cork Street, Dublin. Narrated via interviews with former City Councillor John Gallagher, architect Gerry Cahill, author and journalist Frank McDonald and sociologist Aileen O’Gorman, the viewer discovers an area in Dublin that has gradually but dramatically transformed in the last 80 years. Utilising Situationist methodologies, Barry recreates a personal derive* through the character Girl. Girl’s journey provides a complimentary narrative by exploring the urban environment, paying attention to the smaller details, lost objects, signage, an allotment, increasing the viewer’s awareness of the urban landscape of which the narrators speak. This hybrid film creates a dialogue that reflects on a historic area in Dublin, whilst situated in the present.

Missing Green was supported by The Arts Council Film Project Award. The work has been screened at the Stranger Than Fiction Documentary Film Festival, the Aesthetica Short Film Festival, IndieCork, Les Rencontres Internationales at Palais de Tokyo and Gaîté Lyrique, Paris and Haus der Kulteren der Welt, Berlin, Pallas Projects, Dublin and Open House Dublin 2014. Missing Green was shortlisted and nominated for a Radharc Award 2014.

An excerpt of Missing Green can be viewed at https://vimeo.com/88460810

* Literally “drift” in English; a playful journey through the city that increases awareness of the specific effects of the geographical environment.

Anne Maree Barry, Missing Green © the artist

Anne Maree Barry, Missing Green © the artist

Where did your interest in the Cork Street area stem from?

My interest in the Cork street area began in 2006 after attending a meeting concerning the St. Luke’s Conservation Plan, organised by former Councillor John Gallagher (whose voice acts as one of the main narrative guides in Missing Green). Cork Street and The Coombe area, which were once thriving industrial areas, had become an example of what is called the ‘doughnut effect’. This describes the physical form that cities take on during the decline of their historic centre, with the development of the outer ring, leaving a hollow core at the centre. The doughnut effect can also be seen in full force in the acclaimed TV Series The Wire (2002-2008), with Baltimore the city centre that is in decline.

How did you select the participants?

It was a process of selecting people who understood this particular part of the city and how it worked – the architect, the sociologist, the author, the long term resident.

How did you approach the editing of the interviews? Were you aiming to make a particular argument?

I conducted extensive research into regeneration, social housing and architecture so therefore my concern was about finding a common thread within each interview. I also was interested in the Irish attitude to land and property ownership, what Dublin lost/gained with the rapid development of the Celtic Tiger Years. This topic is revealed in the difference between Cork Street ‘then and now’ and the ‘suburban ideal’ that Frank McDonald speaks about. Other themes that presented themselves were the street and the car. When I was editing the interviews what was most revealing was the manner in which Dublin was initially built – it is ‘a city of houses’ and as Gerry Cahill states that idea began to be disrespected. The historical Coombe area, which once was where the richest people in Dublin lived and had a thriving industrial area, subsequently became poor. It was then targeted to transport people back out to the suburbs – people living in the city centre were essentially forgotten about. Another city which suffered greatly from the decline of industry is Detroit, which is surrounded by a ring of wealthier suburbs – the classic example of the ‘doughnut’ effect. One of my intentions was also to reflect on the past whilst being in the present by utilising Girl’s journey as a guide. Girl’s journey references change and being lost, in some ways, within a city.

Why did you use the hybrid form combining the audio, which resembles a more conventional documentary, with the fictional narrative depicted visually?

I wrote the treatment for Missing Green in 2008 and always knew it would look and feel a certain way – the combination of a journey, a factual story and soundscape. The merging of these three elements – drama, documentary interviews and sound – however was no easy feat. I constantly questioned how they would sit together, what type of film I was making and more importantly how do I present this research in a cohesive short film? A structural influence was Dreams of A Life (2011, Carol Morley); it was essential to have finally found an example of the type of documentary re-enactment I was interested in. Last year an article stated that this current trend in films is called Creative Nonfiction – a term referring to true stories that use literary techniques in order to share a story in a different manner than conventional journalism. Similarly, writer Larry Rohan from The New York Times has said that documentaries are also at the point where they’re breaking from form and function, from straightforward journalism and into something diverse and wilder. Voice-over, music and narrative arcs based on real life are used in different and clever ways. Therefore to answer the question – it was an instinctual aesthetic choice however I think it is positive that the work now has a place within a genre.

Can you tell us about your residency in Toronto and how you find working in a city with which you are less familiar? Is the process different when your time in a place is limited?

The residency programme is with LIFT – Liaison of Independent Film Makers of Toronto – where I have been developing the project No Mean City. I had begun remote research before I went to Toronto however I discovered you cannot have a feel for a city – its problems, its success, how it operates – until you subsequently become familiar with it (I had never visited Toronto prior to the residency). Furthermore, in a city which I am less familiar, different problems arose – weather, how to navigate within my new role as producer and production manager and selecting interested interviewees to participate in my research. What was familiar was that I could utilise the learnt working methodology from Missing Green and adapt it to this current project. Additionally, I have found similarities between Missing Green and No Mean City, for example Frank McDonald speaks in Missing Green about the woonerf concept** and what that would mean for Dublin and the problem with traffic. A month before I arrived to Toronto the first woonerf was completed in the West Don Lands and similarly woonerf-like roads are appearing, one where I used to live at the west side of St. Lawrence Market. Toronto is a young city unlike Dublin. I’m quite honoured to be capturing and documenting a specific period of time in Toronto’s progression.

** A Dutch term referring to a living street with shared space, traffic calming and low speed limits.

Also screening on 31 January 2015:

Stina Wirfelt, Monuments (2008), 7m; Courtesy of the artist

Stina Wirfelt, Tame Time (2010), 9m; Courtesy of the artist

For further information please contact Logan Sisley: logan.sisley@dublincity.ie or Steven McGovern: smcgovern.hughlane@dublincity.ie

City, Assembled

A moving panorama inspired by the Dublin Civic Exhibition 1914 (A UCD – IADT collaboration)

“The new town plan of Dublin is too great and too fascinating to be handled by any one individual architect, nor should its carrying out be committed to other than Dublin men – or at least Irishmen. The builders of a city should be the citizens themselves and the quality of their work will be in proportion to their understanding, and their sympathy for the history that has made them. Only so can they interpret what the city’s future greatness may be.” – C.R. Ashbee, A New Dublin (1914)

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City, Assembled is a moving panorama inspired by the Dublin Civic Exhibition 1914, and is on display at the City Assembly House, South William Street, from 26 January to 8 February 2015. The exhibition is a collaboration between the School of Architecture, University College Dublin and the National Film School at the Institute of Art, Design and Technology. It is one of three exhibitions taking place in Dublin’s city centre to mark the centenary of the Civic Exhibition which took place in Dublin’s former Linenhall. It runs in conjunction with Phoenix Rising at Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane (07.11.14 – 29.03.15), and House/City, an exhibition curated by Brian Ward of the Dublin School of Architecture, DIT shown on the Linenhall site, which is now occupied by DIT (26.11.14 – 05.12.14).

City, Assembled exhibition installation view. Copyright Pierre Jolivet.

City, Assembled exhibition installation view. Copyright Pierre Jolivet.

City, Assembled reflects on Dublin in terms of its past, present and potential future. It provides an opportunity for visitors to become displaced from their immediate surroundings, enabling a reimagination of Dublin’s civic space. The exhibition references the Dublin Civic Exhibition 1914 and the Dublin Town Planning Competition 1914, both inspired by the work of Scotsman Patrick Geddes. Geddes, a biologist by training, was a town planner and sociologist with diverse interests including the theories of education and knowledge, the arts and history. He was invited to organise the exhibition and subsequent competition by Lord and Lady Aberdeen in order to re-imagine Dublin as ‘the phoenix of cities’ during a period of economic, social and political strife.

Lord and Lady Aberdeen held the Viceroyalty of Ireland in 1886 and again from 1906 to 1915. They were both fervent advocates of Home Rule, aware of the imbalance between urban poverty and the new rural prosperity. The Church Street Disaster of 1913, in which the collapse of two tenement houses killed seven people, was one of a series of events that highlighted Dublin’s housing problem. The Aberdeens’ interest in the revitalisation of Dublin’s inner city and wider environs led to the exhibition and town planning competition. The Civic Exhibition was held from 15 July to 31 August 1914. The exhibition was widely supported, with special excursion trains to Dublin provided. An attendance of 9,000 visitors on the opening day was reported and over 110,000 over the course of the exhibition.

Coinciding with the exhibition Geddes proposed the Dublin Town Planning Competition,  organised by the Civics Institute of Ireland, which aimed to produce a set of proposals that could be used to guide the overall pattern of development in Dublin. Eight competition entries were received, competing for the £500 prize fund offered by Lord Aberdeen. Only three of the eight entries are known to remain, dispersed throughout various institutions in Ireland and America. Using film and photography City, Assembled brings the archival material together in one location. City, Assembled shows Dublin then and now, conveying the ambition of the 1914 proposals, allowing for a renewed awakening and re-imagination of our city’s planning.

The exhibition takes the form of an informative journey. Viewers navigate their way around a freestanding timber structure, erected in the centre of the City Assembly House’s octagonal gallery. Along the perimeter of the structure the viewer is presented with material depicting Dublin city in terms of ‘what it was’, ‘what it is’ and ‘what it could be’.

Darkest Dublin (what it was)

City, Assembled includes John Cooke’s photographs depicting the stark living conditions of Dublin city in the years leading up to the Dublin Civic Exhibition. These images are now housed in the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland and have been collated into a book, Darkest Dublin, by Christiaan Corlett, telling the story of the forgotten events of the Church Street disaster. This tragedy served as the catalyst for a series of events that culminated in a public inquiry and the ‘1913 Report of the Departmental Committee into the Housing Conditions of the Working Classes in the City of Dublin’. For the inquiry John Cooke, then treasurer of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, carried out a personal inspection, in the company of the society’s officers, of Dublin’s inner city housing. In the inquiry he described the slums in the north inner city and the Liberties and Coombe on the south side. The findings were shocking. “There are many tenement houses with seven or eight rooms that house a family in each room, and contain a population of between forty and fifty souls. We have visited one house that we found to be occupied by 98 persons, another by 74, and a third by 73.” Five images have been chosen from the collection (of over one hundred of John Cooke’s photographs) in order to represent Dublin city in 1913 (what it was).

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Panorama (what it is)

The design for the exhibition originated from a 4th Year module titled ‘Disseminating Architecture’ taught by Professor Hugh Campbell and Stephen Mulhall in the School of Architecture in University College Dublin, and assisted by Philip Crowe. The original idea of an immersive panorama was then developed through design based research. Precedents have been a major influence on the design and construction of City, Assembled. The painted panorama, invented by the Irish born Robert Barker, played an important role in 19th century cultural life and was one of many spectacular forms of entertainment that became available to citizens at a reasonable price. In 1821 one of the earliest moving panoramas is recorded to have been exhibited on Lower Abbey Street in Dublin in a purpose built pavilion; it is said to have outsold ‘high art’ of the time due to its cheap seating prices. These, coupled with Edinburgh’s Outlook Tower designed by Patrick Geddes, one of the main organisers of the Dublin Civic Exhibition 1914, have been major influences on the design of City, Assembled.

“The development and management of city spaces… often require this decentering and estranging device in order for the spectator to gain an exterior vantage point from which to judge its successes and failures.”
– M.C. Boyer, The City of Collective Memory (1994)

The octagonal room in the City Assembly House presented the perfect opportunity for a panoramic experience and drove the development of the structure. Early versions of the design used the existing walls for the panorama. However through group discussion and design it was decided that the exhibition should be a stand-alone structure that incorporated both the panorama and archival material. The design of this structure was explored at a scale of 1:1 allowing the team to better understand the spaces it created and to refine the technical aspects of the moving panorama.

The City, Assembled panorama presents the viewer with a displaced and somewhat distorted view of their immediate surroundings. It combines both photography and projection with the aim of representing South William Street (directly outside the City Assembly House) in a new light, to invoke thought and contemplation on how we view our cities. A rotating projector throws a populated film onto an unpopulated printed screen to create a unique immersive panorama experience (what it is).

Archival Material (what it could be)

In order to disseminate the ambition of the original town planning competition, City, Assembled has curated dispersed archival material into films to make them accessible to the public. Original footage of Lord and Lady Aberdeen opening the Dublin Civic Exhibition 1914 has been provided by the IFI Irish Film Archive. Other material includes C.R. Ashbee’s New Dublin, currently housed in the UCD Library
Special Collections, and F.A. Cushing Smith’s original hand drawn maps and proposals held in
the Irish Architectural Archive. The ambition of these entries influenced the development of the
Dublin city we know today. From vast infrastructural re-planning to the design of a new
civic centre, these entries convey the potential for re-imagining Dublin city (what it could be).

City, Assembled was designed, constructed and curated by Cillian Briody, Matthew Mullin and David O’Mahony, three Masters of Architecture students studying at the School of Architecture, University College Dublin (supervised by Stephen Mulhall, lecturer in the School of Architecture). The development of the technical aspects of the exhibition was achieved through collaboration with Finbarr Crotty, Aran Hennessey, and Niamh McNamara (supervised by Donald Taylor Black, Anne O’Leary and Matt Skinner) of the Institute of Art, Design and Technology. A special thanks to the Irish Georgian Society for their contribution to City, Assembled.

http://cargocollective.com/cityassembled
https://cityassemblyhousepano.wordpress.com