The Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) is proud to announce the launch of a six-year international partnership with Irish Arts Center (IAC) in New York, beginning with the U.S. presentation of Patricia Hurl’s acclaimed retrospective, Irish Gothic. This collaboration marks a significant step in IMMA’s 2024–2028 strategy, A Creative Catalyst for Change, which positions IMMA as a Global Connector, committed to amplifying Irish creativity on the world stage through dynamic international partnerships.
Curated by IMMA Collections Curator, Johanne Mullan, Irish Gothic opens at IAC on Friday 5 September and will run for three months. The exhibition spans four decades of Hurl’s powerful and deeply personal work, exploring themes of gender, domesticity, and emotional resilience. Originally presented at IMMA, the exhibition’s journey to New York exemplifies IMMA’s commitment to sharing Irish artistic voices globally.
Coinciding with the opening of Irish Gothic, IMMA and IAC will also launch the first dedicated publication of Patricia Hurl’s work, marking a long awaited and significant moment in the artist’s career. This richly illustrated volume offers archival material and critical texts and reflections on Hurl’s practice from Jennifer Higgie, Catherine Marshall, and Fionna Barber, and an interview with the artist. The publication was made possible with the support of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, who have supported Patricia Hurl’s wider practice through her Pollock Krasner Award in 2023, making its launch in New York especially meaningful. This marks a major milestone for Hurl and a celebration of her legacy on an international stage.
Further demonstrating its role as a Global Connector, IMMA is a founding partner of IRELAND INVITES, a groundbreaking initiative launched in 2023 alongside Hugh Lane Gallery and Culture Ireland. This three-year pilot programme brings international biennale curators to Ireland to engage directly with Irish artists and institutions. The initiative has already resulted in 14 Irish artists being selected for major international biennales, including Sydney, Toronto, Liverpool, Lahore, Bangkok, Helsinki, and the Hawai’i Triennial.
One of the most impactful outcomes of this initiative was Kīpuka Ireland, a week-long cultural exchange at the Hawai’i Triennial 2025, curated by IMMA’s Rachael Gilbourne. Through film, performance, and participatory workshops, Irish artists explored shared histories of colonisation, language, and land with local Hawaiian communities, positioning IMMA as a centre for research, dialogue, and global cultural exchange.
IMMA Director Annie Fletcher stated:
“Patricia Hurl’s monumental retrospective at IMMA was incredibly moving and I am so pleased that audiences in New York will have the opportunity to connect with her work. I am delighted IMMA is embarking on this new partnership with the IAC. IMMA’s role as a Global Connector is about more than exporting exhibitions. It is about building enduring relationships that foster dialogue, creativity, and shared futures. Our collaboration with IAC and our leadership in IRELAND INVITES are models for how Irish institutions can engage meaningfully with international peers, bringing Irish perspectives to global audiences while inviting diverse voices into our own cultural conversations.”
Irish Arts Center Director of Programming and Education Rachael W. Gilkey said:
“The support of Irish Arts Center’s our community has driven our transformation and enabled us to dream as big as this: to partner with an organization as central to Irish and international cultural life and as IMMA, to be equipped to display major museum exhibitions of such scale, and to offer work as striking and evocative as Patricia’s the room it needs to reveal the full expression of four decades of her artistic vision. We’re so excited for New Yorkers to experience this titanic career that’s finally getting the recognition it deserves — and for this work to greet and stir viewers throughout the Fall 2025 season.”
As Ireland prepares for its EU Presidency in 2026 and looks ahead to the Global Ireland 2040 Strategy, IMMA’s international collaborations will continue to play a vital role in shaping Ireland’s cultural identity abroad and at home.
ENDS
21 August 2025
Notes:
Gallery hours are drop in, but reservations are encouraged and can be made at irishartscenter.org.
Sept 5-28, Mon-Fri from 2pm to 8pm, Sat and Sun from 1pm to 5pm
Sept 29 to Dec 12, Mon-Fri from 2pm to 8pm, Sat from 1pm to 5pm
Irish Gothic Opening Reception at the Irish Arts Centre, New York
Friday 5 September at 6pm
This is a free event. Reservations are encouraged and can be made at irishartscenter.org
Meet the Curator event
Sept 6 at 2:30pm
This is a free event. Reservations are encouraged and can be made at irishartscenter.org
About Patricia Hurl
Originally from Dublin, Ireland, and a former member of Temple Bar Galleries and Studios Dublin, Patricia Hurl was a lecturer in fine art painting at the Dublin Institute of Technology. She studied at the National College of Art and Design and at Dún Laoghaire School of Art and Design. Patricia Hurl often works in collaboration with artist Therry Rudin, with whom she co-founded the Damer House Gallery in Co Tipperary in 2012, and is a member of Na Cailleacha, a collective of six visual artists, one jazz musician, and a curator/writer. Hurl has exhibited in selected group and solo shows and has represented Ireland in symposiums in the U.S., South Africa, and Zaragoza, Spain. She was a contributor to The Great Book of Ireland, and her work is included in many publications, including Art and Architecture of Ireland Volume V: Twentieth Century, Royal Irish Academy, 2015. Hurl has been the recipient of many awards, including the Pollock-Krasner Award in 2023. Her work is represented in private and public collections including the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA); The Arts Council /An Chomhairle Ealaíon; Drogheda Municipal Collection; Highlanes Gallery; and the University of Limerick.
About Irish Arts Center
Irish Arts Center, founded in 1972 and based in Hell’s Kitchen, New York City, is a home for artists and audiences of all backgrounds who share a passion or appreciation for the evolving arts and culture of contemporary Ireland and Irish America. We present, develop, and celebrate work from established and emerging artists and cultural practitioners, providing audiences with emotionally and intellectually engaging experiences—fueled by collaboration, innovation, adventurousness, authenticity, and the celebration of our common humanity, in an environment of Irish hospitality. Steeped in grassroots traditions, we also provide community education programs and access to the arts for people of all ages and ethnic, racial and socioeconomic backgrounds. In an historic partnership of the people of Ireland and New York, Irish Arts Center recently opened a state-of-the-art new facility to support this mission for the 21st century.
Visit irishartscentre.org for more information.
About Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA)
Founded in 1991, IMMA is Ireland’s National Cultural Institution for Modern and Contemporary Art located in the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin 8. Its vibrant, bold, and diverse programme comprises exhibitions, commissions, and event-based projects by leading Irish and international artists, as well as a rich engagement and learning programme which together provides audiences of all ages the opportunity to connect with contemporary art and unlock their creativity. IMMA is also the home of the National Collection of Modern and Contemporary Art of nearly 4,000 artworks by Irish and international artists. IMMA makes this national resource available through exhibitions at IMMA and other venues nationally and internationally, engagement and learning programmes and digital resources. Visit imma.ie for further information.
For media inquiries, interviews, or additional information, please contact
IMMA Communications Office:
Patrice Molloy E: [email protected] T: 086 2009957
Monica Cullinane E: [email protected] T: 086 2010023