FROM SOURCE TO SEA

22 June – 22 September  

Gibson Galleries  

‘For close on three miles above Cork the river runs slow and smooth as if reluctant to meet the sea. Pleasant meadows border the stream, meadows in a wide valley, the gateway to the west.’  

– Robert Gibbings, Lovely is the Lee (1945) 

This exhibition follows the course of the River Lee from its origins in the Shehy Mountains and Gougane Barra in the west to its meeting with the Celtic Sea at the mouth of Cork Harbour in the east.  

Spanning historic and contemporary works from the Collection, FROM SOURCE TO SEA celebrates the culture of the River Lee and its tributaries. Each painting, drawing, print, and sculpture offers a perspective on the river, the stories it has carried and collected, the places and people it has shaped, and the changes it has inevitably borne.

Much loved paintings, ranging from John Butts' View of Cork from Audley Place (c.1750) and Nathaniel Grogan's Whipping the Herring out of Town (c.1800) to George Mounsey Wheatley Atkinson’s Paddle Steamer Entering the Port of Cork (1842), are joined by the work of artists Sarah Grace Carr, Kate Dobbin, John Fitzgerald, Robert Gibbings, Patrick Hennessy, Seán Keating, Diarmuid Ó Ceallacháin, and George Petrie. Recent acquisitions by Ita Freeney, Bernadette Kiely, and Donald Teskey offer new contexts, while portraits by Nano Reid, Séamus Murphy, and Eileen Healy recall rich tales from the Lee Valley, including The Tailor and Ansty and the inimitable voice of Cónal Creedon.

Come on a journey along the River Lee and follow its course FROM SOURCE TO SEA.

Curated by Michael Waldron 

NOW YOU SEE IT…

20 July – 15 September | Upper Gallery
27 July – 22 September | Modern Galleries 

‘Forever – is composed of Nows’ – Emily Dickinson  

Crawford Art Gallery invites you to a final season of exhibitions before its major redevelopment commences in autumn 2024. 

This exhibition draws together a diverse range of artworks from the Collection, many of which have been selected by the public.

Informed by our recent You Tell We Show public campaign, the selected artworks in this exhibition span three centuries and range from portraits and landscapes to more abstract expressions.

Encompassing old favourites and new acquisitions, these are complemented by paintings and sculptures chosen by Crawford Art Gallery’s team. Alongside each artwork is a label containing the reason for its selection.

This exhibition is a final opportunity for visitors to experience these national treasures in our historic building before its closure for redevelopment in autumn 2024.

Is your favourite represented or will you find a new one?! Now you see it… 

We invited six familiar Cork Faces to the Gallery to choose their favourite artwork from NOW YOU SEE IT…Watch the below videos and find out what works they chose and why!

Catherine Kirwan

John Spillane

Karen Underwood

Stevie G

Hilary Rose

Conal Creedon

AFI 2024 Archive

WIFF WAFF* is PLAYING at my GAFF

14 June – 7 July
Upper Gallery

PLAY artist-made KRAZY TABLES from the National Novelty Ping Pong Table Collection, which have AMUSED (and frustrated) participants and spectators alike since KING PING PONG started commissioning them in 2016.

KING PING PONG is the FEVER-DREAM of curators and ping pong enthusiasts DAVEY MOOR and PAUL McGRANE and, for the first time, the KRAZY TABLES come to CORK!

 This year Cork artist ELINOR O’DONOVAN has created a new table Got the Snip!

If you think YOUR table tennis is up to scratch, PLAY THE TABLES to SEE HOW GOOD YOU ARE!

KRAZY TABLE MAKERS:
ELINOR O’DONOVAN  Got the snip! (2024)
ELLA BERTILSSON  Monster Munch (2022)
LILANE PUTHOD  Ehm (2022)
PRENDERGAST & MOOR  Swiss Waff (2022/16)
DAIRE McEVOY We drink to play We play to drink (2019)
TANAD AARON Valley 1 & Valley 2 (2018)
DAVID LUNNEY String Ricochet (2017) 

In partnership with
CORK MIDSUMMER FESTIVAL

Cork Midsummer Festival Logo

(*Wiff Waff is an old name for table tennis!)

In the glow of a frozen flame

17 May – 21 July

This collaborative project between visual artist, Brian Teeling and art writer, Jennie Taylor explores Crawford Art Gallery’s building and its immediate surroundings. Evocative, subversive images and flash fiction populate this publication, capturing and entangling a stillness of a witnessing object and the frantic movements of a living gaze.

In this work, time fictionally folds and collapses to bring details from 1921-24 into a dislocated moment. Imagery and storytelling act as tools to slice, swell and exaggerate sculptures, architectural features and historic events. Teeling and Taylor’s work is drawn from research of the gallery with a focus on the display of 18th and 19th century sculptural forms in the gallery’s iconic Sculpture Galleries, combined with events that occurred and were visible from the building during the period and the life of a local artisan from the same time.

An audio soundscape of the five flash fiction stories can be accessed below.

Brian Teeling is an artist living and working in Dublin. He has no fine art qualifications and is entirely self-taught. Recent exhibitions include Portrait Lab at The Model, Sligo (2022-23), Speech Sounds at Visual, Carlow, Zurich Portrait Prize at National Gallery of Ireland (2021-22) and Crawford Art Gallery (2022), A Vague Anxiety at IMMA (2019).

Jennie Taylor is an art writer and educator. She has published her work in Critical Bastards Magazine, The Stinging Fly, Paper Visual Art and Visual Arts Newsletter. Jennie was the 2022-23 Writer in Residence at the Roscommon Arts Centre. She is currently a PhD researcher in Art Writing at the National College of Art & Design.

The publication is available at €18 via the Bookshop or online

This publication is one of six artists projects commissioned by Crawford Art Gallery as part of BUILDING AS WITNESS which is kindly supported by the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under the Decade of Centenaries Programme 2012-2023.

Martin Healy: A Moment Twice Lived

2 May – 30 June
Screening Room

Continuing a season of Artists’ film from Crawford Art Gallery’s collection, A Moment Twice Lived (2016) by Martin Healy explores our perception of the passage of time through the subjective experience of memory, aging and dreaming. The circuitous narrative focuses on a fleeting moment  - in the library of the Crawford Art Gallery - when a lone character studies the surface of a painting and begins to sense she has seen the image before.

The work references JW Dunne’s book ‘An Experiment with Time’ (1927) and the film oscillates between two inter-connected scenes revealing how our lived experiences often distort in our memory into increasingly blurred distinctions between the past, present and the future. 

Martin Healy works with photography, film and sculpture to explore the cultural and symbolic paradigms that underpin human mythologies and belief systems. His works have been shown widely both nationally and internationally including Yuugen, CCA Andratx, Mallorca; Park Life, Glucksman Gallery, Cork (2022); The Augury,  Butler Gallery, Kilkenny and Traces, Kasteel Wijlre, Netherlands (2018).

CLARE LANGAN: The Heart of a Tree

14 March – 28 April

Screening Room

This film contemplates the centrality of trees – the giants of nature - to the planet's survival, and ours.

Set in a barren treeless landscape, The Heart of A Tree (2020) is a glimpse into a future world where humans negotiate their way through an inhospitable environment, harvesting air - the new gold – and planting trees on a deserted black beach, hoping to repopulate the planet with its source of oxygen. 

Langan’s film is a glimpse into a future world where human beings have evolved and adapted in order to survive, exploring the disconnection between humankind and nature and ultimately within us.

LIGHT AND SHADE

9 March – 14 April

The Long Room

Taking its name from Soirle MacCana’ s Light and Shade, Youghal, the exhibition features 26 works from the gallery’s extensive collection.

This selection is evocative of Spring, as a season of renewal, herds brought to pasture, new growth in gardens and hopefully good drying weather.

The exhibition is an invitation to discover some lesser-known works and artists in our collection and to enjoy the grand stretch in the evening.

Artists featured include John Arnesby Brown, Gerald Bruen, Sylvia Cooke-Collis, Elizabeth Cope, Stefanie Dinkelbach, Doug DuBois, Brigid Ganly, Adrian Hill, James le Jeune, William John Leech, Soirle MacCana, Sean McSweeney, Cormac Mehegan, Rosaleen Moore, John Murphy, Tom Nisbet, Eva O'Connell, Aloysius O'Kelly, James O'Halloran. Monica Poole, Nikki Tait, Michael Sheehan, Niamh Swanton, Anne Yeats.

DANNY MCCARTHY: Found Sound (Lost at Sea) 11.1.11

11 January 2024

A lost coastal sound will return to echo through Cork city centre for one day this January.

Found Sound (Lost at Sea) 11.1.11 is an installation by sound artist Danny McCarthy which, on Thursday 11 January 2024, will resonate across Emmet Place outside Crawford Art Gallery and infiltrate the surrounding soundscapes of Cork.

The performance of this unique sound work commemorates the thirteenth anniversary of the last foghorn sounding from lighthouses along the Irish coast when they ceased on 11 January 2011.

Found Sound (Lost at Sea) 11.1.11 was created as a result of McCarthy’s interest in acoustic ecology.

The sound installation will be audible intermittently throughout the day and serves as a reminder of what was once an imperative soundtrack to daily life.

McCarthy’s work, which joined the National Collection in 2020, is unique to Crawford Art Gallery’s context. The Gallery was originally built in 1724 as Cork’s Custom House and the sound work recalls its ties to the city’s commercial success, since the eighteenth century, as a significant port for commerce, migration, and defence. Cork Harbour also lays claim to being one of the largest natural navigable harbours in the world and, as the city’s motto of ‘Statio Bene Fida Carinis’ announces, still offers a safe home to seafaring travellers, tourists, and inter-continental shipping.

Crawford Art Gallery is delighted to mark the anniversary of this important work and invites visitors to stroll by the gallery on Thursday 11 January for this echo of a once ubiquitous but now lost coastal sound.

About the Artist
Danny McCarthy (b.1950) is one of Ireland’s pioneers of performance art and sound art for over forty years and he continues to be a leading exponent exhibiting and performing both in Ireland and abroad. In 2006, he founded The Quiet Club with Mick O’Shea, a floating membership sound (art and electronics) performance group. He has exhibited nationally and internationally, and is a founding director of Triskel Arts Centre and National Sculpture Factory.

VENUS PATEL: Eggshells

8 December 2023 - 5 March 2024
Screening Room

Venus Patel’s film Eggshells (2022) revisits an incident in which the artist was assaulted and pelted with eggs. Filmed in twelve parts or acts, it explores the incident and the artist’s response to it through several archetypes, each of whom perform with an egg. For Venus Patel art is her means of processing traumatic experiences rather than internalising them.

Using the weapon of the assailant the egg itself becomes a tool with many psychological and symbolic meanings within it. The power of reincarnation, birth, nature, hope while also pointing to the power it has to utterly humiliate and embarrass if used in a certain way’ writes Patel.

Each of the twelve characters - which range from 70s housewife to alien to chicken – are based around the artist’s personal understanding of herself and how she reacts and perceives the world around her. They deal with emotions beginning from sorrow, to internalised then externalised anger, to acceptance.

There is an embrace of the absurdity of these performances while still speaking to the deeper subject matter. By placing the outlandish characters into public spaces, they confront a preconceived notion of pushing true queer expression into only hidden spaces or only at night, into the daylight and into the normal everyday experience.

VENUS PATEL: Eggshells is part of The Power of Us Programme.

CURTIN // KEATING: Sit Stand Smoke

26 April – 5 May

Long Room

SIT STAND SMOKE is a short Virtual Reality (VR) experience that explores some of the motivations and circumstances that led to the creation of the painting Men of the South (1921-22) by Seán Keating. As the Irish War of Independence drew to a close, it reveals the artist’s feelings and misgivings about some of the choices made by the new Irish State that followed.

Funny, provocative, and poignant, SIT STAND SMOKE takes the viewer into the unexpected world of Dr Éimear O’Connor, art historian, biographer, and – in this narrative – a newly initiated VR director casting actors for her first VR project. Although full of challenges, VR does afford Éimear the opportunity to have a conversation with Seán Keating, played by his great-grandson, Jonathan Quinlan.

Created by CURTIN // KEATING (co-artists Linda Curtin and David Keating, the latter being the grandson of the painter), SIT STAND SMOKE marks a century to the month since the purchase of Men of the South for the Collection, by the Gibson Bequest Committee, in April 1924.

This VR experience features characters based on volunteers who appear in the painting – Jim Riordan, Denis O’Mullane, Jim Cashman, John Jones, Roger Kiely, and Dan Browne – all of whom were members of the Cork No.2 Brigade of the Irish Republican Army and came mainly from the Newmarket and Kiskeam area of County Cork. 

Click here to pre-book your 30-minute SIT STAND SMOKE experience through Eventbrite.

Warning: This VR experience may not be suitable for individuals with photosensitive epilepsy or light sensitivity. Viewer discretion is advised. Recommended for ages 14+.

Commissioned by Crawford Art Gallery as part of BUILDING AS WITNESS, supported by the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under the Decade of Centenaries Programme 2012 - 2023.

With additional support from Screen Ireland, Animation Ireland Innovation & Immersive Development Fund, Ballymore, BT Business, Cork Film Centre, and Immersive Ireland.

Sit Stand Smoke (left to right, Adam Duggan, Al Draper, Danny Horgan) Photo_Tadgh Richardson

Sit Stand Smoke (left to right, Adam Duggan, Al Draper, Danny Horgan) Photo: Tadgh Richardson

JAN McCULLOUGH: Night Class

13 April - 9 June

Gibson Galleries

NIGHT CLASS is a response to Crawford Art Gallery’s archive, often unseen materials that are imprinted with evocative layers of informal histories and invisible labour.  

This gallery building functioned as a School of Art from 1832 until 1979 and, during this time, professional photographers were periodically hired to stage and document examples of painting, sculpture, and lacemaking. These images of fine art students’ labour were printed in aspirational prospectuses promoting the work of the institution.  

In NIGHT CLASS, Jan McCullough uses photography and sculptural intervention to make visible alternative forms of labour and knowledge. She was drawn to the archive’s quietly forgotten register of technical classes – building construction, carpentry, and painting and decorating – which often took place at night. Her works also explore the fabric of the building itself; the interventions and the skilled work of technicians and caretakers that have been part of the building’s maintenance for over a hundred years. 

This project also represents a personal performance by the artist. Entering the building with a camera at night alongside the gallery’s caretakers and cleaning staff, McCullough immersed herself in the nocturnal rhythms of the gallery, learning to construct, reframe, stage and document the remnants of past actions – a night class of her own. 

Jan McCullough is a Belfast-based artist who explores the human acts of construction, fabrication and DIY, and the communities of interest and place that form around them.  

Commissioned by Crawford Art Gallery as part of BUILDING AS WITNESS, kindly supported by the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under the Decade of Centenaries Programme 2012-2023. 

With additional support from Arts Council Ireland and the Making and Momentum [In Conversation with Eileen Gray] Artist Bursary. 

Image © Jan McCullough, Frame Work II, from the series Night Class, 2024.

Image © Jan McCullough, Frame Work II, from the series Night Class, 2024.

URSULA BURKE: These Fragile Monuments

 25 May – 21 July

Sculpture Galleries

Ursula Burke will be in Conversation with Dr Edwin Coomasaru
Friday 24 May, 6pm
More details here.

Ursula Burke will create a tapestry frieze which investigates Irish historical, art historical and contemporary representations of guerrilla warfare. The tapestry is inspired by the work of Norwegian tapestry artist Hannah Ryggen (1894-1970) who made a series of powerful tapestries representing images of resistance and highlighting the brutality of Nazi occupied Norway during World War II. The artist has invited Ukrainian weaver Zhanna Petrenko to weave the tapestry, creating a thread between two countries and periods of time - Ireland and Ukraine, both suffering oppression at the hands of a more powerful neighbour and both having common experiences of the devastating effects of famine.

Burke will also create a sculpture of a battle - bruised dog modelled on ‘The Jennings Dog’ - a Greek bronze from the 2nd century CE - which will be covered in hand embroidered flames emblematic of all the houses and commercial premises that were burnt out by the Black and Tans.

Ursula Burke Work in Progress (2023) © the artist

Ursula Burke Work in Progress (2023) © the artist

A MATTER OF TIME

17 February – 3 June 2024

Artists: Darren Almond, Kevin Atherton, Sara Baume, Cecily Brennan, Ursula Burke, Elaine Byrne, Gary Coyle, Dorothy Cross, Jamie Cross, Mollie Douthit, Amanda Dunsmore, Joy Gerrard, Rula Halawani, Rebecca Horn, Austin Ivers, Nick Miller, Brian O’Doherty, Kathy Prendergast, Gail Ritchie, Patrick Scott, Naomi Sex, Yinka Shonibare, Nedko Solakov, Phillip Toledano and Daphne Wright.

A Matter of Time considers temporality within a broad spectrum focusing on the human experience. Time is part of how we think about the world and our existence. It is present in the most common and sometimes mundane of human activities and in the more significant and profound.   Time can be wasteful, enduring, precious and elusive and can be measured through the seconds passing on a clock or by the growth spurt of a teenager. Yet, time is also a central characteristic of power, control, capitalism, morality and belief. 

Displayed over two floors, with the work of 25 artists and 60 works, the exhibition alludes to and includes themes of climate change, nationhood, post-colonialism, appropriation, memory, health, urbanism, meditation, re-emergence, hope, and legacy.   

An extensive Learn & Explore programme of artists’ conversations, tours, and workshops will bring some of the key themes in the exhibition to the fore.   

Following Threads

9 September 2023 – 28 January 2024

Textile based artworks have been a growing presence in art galleries over the last decade with artists investigating a variety of new and age-old concerns with fibres and threads. The boundaries of traditional techniques such as weaving and embroidery have been pushed by artists who are interested in embracing the potential of thread in contemporary art. 

Spotlighting areas of practice we are curious about and interested in, the exhibition will feature works by Ailbhe Ní Bhriain, Isabel Nolan, Matt Smith, Ciara O’Connor, Cecilia Danell, Mainie Jellett design by Ceodogàn rugs, Dorothy Cross, Michelle Malone, Jennifer Trouton, Anne Kiely and Mary Palmer.

Ailbhe Ní Bhriain works with films, computer generated imagery, collage, print, installation and tapestry. Intrusion III, is a large scale Jacquard tapestry translated from loose digital collage depicting scenes of architectural ruination.

Working on a more intimate scale, Ciara O’Connor’s thread drawings deals with themes of identity, feminism, trauma and recovery: “When I stitch, I am aware of how my actions mirror those that have gone before me, and I relish the connection. Whilst honouring the labours of the past I seek to utilize these techniques in new and dynamic ways to explore societal issues, challenge the notion of craft, and tell stories about my experience of being a woman in today’s world.”

A recent addition to the gallery’s collection, Daunt, Dorothy Cross’ work is an unusual medium for the artist. The tapestry brings to the fore familial and local geographic traces by replicating a photograph taken by the artist’s father in the 1930’s into a tangible object.

For Matt Smith History is a ‘constantly selected and refined narrative’ that edits out marginalised histories. After sourcing tapestries, mostly on eBay and auction sites, Smith laboriously unpicked and re-stitched them to subvert their original in order to challenge our perceptions and highlight the fluid nature of memory and history.

Isabel Nolan has an extensive practice in term of media. Echoing stained glass of churches and grand chandeliers The Light Pours Out of You offers a dysfunctional, chandelier like sculpture which cast fabric instead of light. Nolan’s powerful and playful signature work was one of the key works in Limerick’s EVA International Biennale (2018).

The 3 tapestries by Michelle Malone where initially shown in her installation Great Uncle Joe about her family experience with the Artane Boys Industrial school. The sourced imagery

for the 3 works were the Artane volume of the archives of the Commission to enquire into child abuse (established in 2000).

Between fiction and reality, Cecilia Danell hand-tufted rugs are inspired by the Swedish landscapes of her childhood, layered with the artist’s research in fiction and science-fiction novels and how the natural world is rendered in these stories.

Jennifer Trouton has described her practice as ‘80% painting but also embroidery, or collage and assemblage, things that were ascribed to women and that were seen as women’s work, women’s subjects and women’s craft.’ The 6 embroideries relate to topical and feminist questions of bodily autonomy and the State, herbs and flowers that have traditionally been known to induce abortion during pregnancy are paired with maps of Ireland and the female pelvis and uterus.

Championing Modernism in 1920s Ireland, Mainie Jellett (1897 -1944) designed rugs derived from her abstract cubism art and from in-depth research in the use of colours, patterns, and shapes. In 2008, Ceadogàn Rugs issued a limited edition of her rugs’ designs. In 2023 they were commissioned to make a rug from Carpet Design, a small Mainie Jellet’s watercolour in the gallery’s collection.

Acquired by the gallery in 2021, Mary Palmer and Anne Kiely’s collaborative art quilt Who Will Tell the Bees delicately combines hand screen-printed images, etchings, and manipulated photographic images to produce layered designs that echo characteristics of the handmade. Who Will Tell the Bees addresses key environmental concerns, as well as the histories of women’s work.

Textile as medium also relates to the gallery’s past as Crawford School of Arts; our shared histories and teachings will be illustrated in Following threads with the display of our collection of lace artefacts.

HARRY CLARKE: Bad Romance

2 December 2023 – 25 February 2024
Long Room

Extended by popular demand!

Enter the inimitable imagination of Harry Clarke in this annual exhibition and encounter the celebrated artist’s remarkable book illustrations, delicate watercolour studies, and earliest works in stained glass.

Created in 1923, Clarke’s studies for The Eve of St Agnes window were inspired by a long Romantic poem by John Keats, while his lavish illustrations for Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery & Imagination look to a darker experience.

Purchased from the artist in 1924, these twenty-six national treasures in ink, watercolour, and stained glass range from the macabre to the amorous to the spiritual and have delighted, mesmerised, and even startled visitors for a century.

This exhibition brings Crawford Art Gallery’s full collection of Harry Clarke works together to offer visitors a rare and enriching experience of the beloved artist’s imagination and skill.

Curated by Michael Waldron

Click here for information about our Harry Clarke Workshops.

Click here for our Harry Clarke Curatorial tour.