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Niamh O’Malley’s Memorial Gardens: A reflection piece

Garden

What can we ascertain of the human gaze and the shadow it casts? Or of memory, that diaphanous veil that shrouds even the most vibrant recollections?

Niamh O’Malley’s Memorial Gardens (2008) draws on a place potent with remembering to literalise the act of looking, the residue left by even the most cursory glance. Aligning a projection with an oil painting, the work sees these disparate materials temporarily fuse in a hovering, ethereal composite. The moment they come apart underscores the constructed, illusory nature of the image, the memorial itself, and the fabrication entailed by the act of looking.

What we see is an oil painting on an aluminum surface overlaid with a video projection of the Memorial Gardens. The observational footage is in itself unremarkable but serves to generate a sense of dailiness, of bodies passing through this sequestered space and occupying it as they would any other. Every seven minutes and twenty-two seconds there are two white flashes, the silent projection fades to white and the painting is revealed. It is a tonal work of the gardens themselves, devoid of colour and human ephemera. It is stark, unapologetically solid, and it lasts only a few moments before the projection begins again.

Charged as the Memorial Gardens are with the ethical implications of looking, O’Malley’s piece easily subverts the reverence and close attention they seek to induce. Inherent in any memorial is the suggestion that something has been tethered to collective consciousness and prevented from slipping into obscurity. They function on the premise that particular places will incite us not only to ‘remember’, but to ‘retrieve’, ‘redeem’ and ‘restore’. The formal compartments of Sir Edward Lutyens’ design at the Memorial Gardens – its symmetry, its classical repose, the stone which signifies an altar – embody this desire to choreograph bodily movement and numinous response.

Yet, when the video fades to white the memories immediately relevant – the ones we reach for – are the short-term impressions made by the video. The broader ‘historical memories’ of the 49,400 Irish soldiers who died during WWI are displaced. In this cross-space of place and commemorative endeavour where a constellation of pre-designed feeling is meant to fester and unfold, O’Malley dissects the act of looking to situate us within the present and most immediate past.

The camera, we understand, does what the human eye cannot: it fixes an objective reality for an extended period of time. And yet, when the projection plays it induces uncertainty, a disembodied quality that stems from variant speeds brought together but failing to cohere. When the screen flashes white we’re unsure what has ruptured: our gaze or the gardens themselves, exhausted from fulfilling our expectations of colour and shape and size. Either way, the oil painting appears as an after-image – a lingering outline imprinted on eyelids.

Featuring as it does the pared back crux of the gardens, the unaffected kernel, the painting’s blunt authenticity aligns the fluctuating projection with the fallible tendencies of sight. This is what the splicing of the two materials allows, a necessary conflation we perform everyday: our implicated gaze imposed over the unabashedly fixed and ‘actual’. The looped nature of the footage suggests this heightened kind of looking – of apprehending – can only stave off the interpretive implications of the gaze for so long.

Our realisation then, in the aftermath of the flashes and fading away, is one relevant to the everyday: we’ve partaken in an illusion. O’Malley evokes this realization in terms of both artistic method and cerebral response: the gardens are a construction aimed at instilling reactions within a certain spectrum, the image presented is a construction as every image is a construction, and our perception is a blend of an initial impression and the poetic-falseness a given consciousness can’t help but bring.

The materials in Memorial Gardens vary in the degree to which the gaze is indelibly entwined with the thing beheld. One element of the work is frenetic, perhaps more ostensibly alive. The other is distilled, less susceptible to change. The moment in which their temporary union comes undone reminds us that what we’ve been perceiving is the product of that perception, not an item from experience itself. The piece, however, is no less esemplastic for the breakage it hinges on.

John Berger writes that ‘Without a pictorial language, nobody can render what they see. With one, they may stop seeing. ‘ Memorial Gardens grapples with this issue of becoming too familiar, too anticipatory, too enmeshed with the mechanisms of seeing to catch a glimpse of the thing itself. It is a rarity, indeed, that we truly behold what we see. The break O’Malley prompts in our viewing doesn’t signify an epiphany – our way of engaging with the world hasn’t been altered. Rather, we have been reminded of what we bring to our surroundings when we consider them, and affirmed is how deeply we require the slippage of personal interpretation, the mistakes of understanding that might be organic or repressive, stringent or lyric. It is a necessary compulsion. The break in the projection is not intended to impede the act of looking, but to encourage a deeper probing, a going past the tenuous ‘top layer’ of our individual impressions.

Memorial Gardens portrays this fluctuating myriad of activity and response, this interpretive haze, and also demonstrates the moment in which the pellicle of perception stutters to reveal the inarguably ‘real’.

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Landmark Lucian Freud Project and 2016 programme

IMMA announces landmark Lucian Freud Project for Ireland alongside an expanded 2016 programme of new work celebrating the radical thinkers and activists whose vision for courageous social change in Ireland and beyond remains relevant to us today.

IMMA is pleased announce highlights from our 2016 exhibition programme today, Tue 8 March 2016. See video.

Sarah Glennie, Director of IMMA, said

“We are delighted to announce today that the IMMA Collection has secured an important long-term loan of 50 works by Lucian Freud (1922-2011); one of the greatest figurative painters of the 20th-century. From September 2016, the IMMA Collection: Freud Project will be presented in a new, dedicated Freud Centre in the IMMA Garden Galleries for five years. With this extraordinary resource IMMA will create a centre for Freud research with a special programme of exhibitions, education partnerships, symposia and research that will maximise this exciting opportunity on offer in Ireland.” Continue reading Landmark Lucian Freud Project and 2016 programme

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Marie Brett reflects on her filmwork E.gress

Dementia is a term describing a range of conditions which cause damage to our brain. This damage affects memory, thinking, language and our ability to perform everyday tasks. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia
Alzheimer Society of Ireland

E.gress, produced by artist Marie Brett and musician Kevin O’Shanahan, is a film that maps a world of loss and change, exploring how individuals diagnosed with dementia find new ways to adjust to changing world.  Launched at IMMA in November 2015, the national tour of E.gress continues with the next stop The Model in Sligo opening on Thursday 3 March.

In this blog Marie Brett reflects on some of the questions she asked herself at the outset of making the work, and what concerns her now that the work has been made and is more widely seen.


 

Marie Brett and Kevin O’Shanahan, E.gress, HD video still, 2013, Courtesy of the artist
Marie Brett and Kevin O’Shanahan, E.gress, HD video still, 2013, Courtesy of the artist

Pauline Boss’s theories on Ambiguous Loss  were very significant when forming ideas for E.gress. Boss describes how when a loved one’s mind or memory is taken away by a chronic mental or physical illness (such as Alzheimers), this leaves the person physically present and psychologically absent; that is, physically with us but emotionally or cognitively missing. I was fascinated by this; the ambivalence of someone being both absent and present, and the simultaneity of presence and loss. Continue reading Marie Brett reflects on her filmwork E.gress

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Kissing in public

As part of the Curator’s Voice series we invited curatorial duo RGKSKSRG (Rachael Gilbourne and Kate Strain) discuss their project This is Public & Sexy, a one-night collection of artworks, choreographers and minor dramas, performed live, which co-incidentally took place on the closing weekend of What We Call Love.


This is Public & Sexy map
Emma Haugh, “The Re-appropriation of Sensuality” (Detail) also featuring This is Public & Sexy printed map designed by Alex Synge.

What We Call Love coincidentally shared its closing weekend with that of our residency as independent curators RGKSKSRG at studio 468, a studio based in St. Andrew’s Community Centre, Rialto, Dublin 8. Located a stone’s throw from the museum, the concerns of our community-based residency and that of the major exhibition at IMMA, were spun from mutual desires. This text serves as a footnote marking this moment of interest in the softer, wetter things in life – desire, sexuality, love – as poised across two very different spaces within Dublin city. This rush of feelings to the site of presentation could be read as reflecting the collective impulse of a society to cast and hold a space where the complexities of love and sexuality can be celebrated, in public. Continue reading Kissing in public

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Let’s talk about love

“This is an unashamedy sensual show, by turns exotic, repulsive, shocking, challenging and yet deliberately thoughtful throughout” Cristín Leach Hughes, The Sunday Times.

We are now in the final three weeks of the major exhibition What We Call Love: From Surrealism to Now which ends on Sunday 7 February. Alongside the exhibition IMMA has presented an extensive programme of screenings, talks, events and live happenings to open up conversations and bring you deeper into the artists’ work. We have gathered together all the resources from the exhibition in this blog, see below, making a perfect introduction to the work, or if you have already visited, a place to delve deeper for further information.

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Love is something that effects us all whether it’s relationship love, parental love or the love between friends or communities. The exhibition What We Call Love doesn’t seek to define love, rather it examines how artists have responded to love  in their work, from Surrealism to the current day. Through this lens the exhibition explores how the notion of love has evolved over the 20th century and what love means in our contemporary culture. At time beautiful and at times challenging this exhibition explores a multitude of love’s faces, from crazy love to love unrequited. It has inspired a wide range of reactions from our visitors, not least of all inspiring a marriage proposal (to our great delight). The Exhibition draws to a close a week before the big love celebration that is St Valentine’s, so why not get in the mood for love and experience What We Call Love at IMMA before February 7th.

Visitors are advised that this exhibition contains some adult themes and explicit imagery. If you would like to know more please speak to a member of staff for further information.

Upcoming Events

There are two upcoming events taking place in the final few weeks of the exhibition. A film series in partnership with the Irish Film Institute takes place this weekend on Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 January with screenings of Un Chant D’Amour (A Song of Love), Dir. Jean Genet, 1950; L’age D’or, Dir: Luis Buñuel, 1930; and Under The Skin, Dir. Jonathan Glazer, 2013. While on Thursday 4 February there is a live performance in gallery of the work of Elmgreen & Dragset, ’24/7/365′, 2009, which displays the love that can exist between two men in a direct, but no less romantic, manner.
Also just opened is the exhibition F**K IMMA, (2015-2016), by Séamus Nolan, a film, live event and archive, commissioned by IMMA as part of What We Call Love and on view in the project spaces (Ground floor, behind reception). Admission is free to Nolan’s work, and the overall exhibition carries an entry fee of €8/5.

Highlights include a talk on the exhibition by curator Christine Macel, Centre Pompidou;  The Neurobiology of Love by Semir Zeki on his pioneering research on the organisation of the visual brain and his experimental enquiries into how a visual stimulus triggers an affective, emotional state, similar to our experience of beauty, desire and love; and an excerpt from the lecture by Dr Maureen Gaffney on her research into the science of emotional intelligence, human functioning and strategies for building fulfilling lives.

Curators preview of the exhibition on Youtube

Join curators Christine Macel (Centre Pompidou) and Rachael Thomas, Senior Curator: Head of Exhibitions, IMMA, as they introduce the core ideas and themes within the exhibition. The film also features a selection of vox pops around the question, ‘what does love mean to you?’

Exhibition Guide

For more detailed text on the show you can read the exhibition guide. This guide will also be provided in printed form on your visit.

Walkthrough Love 

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Installation View, Louise Bourgeois and Miriam Cahn, IMMA 2015, What Call Love, from Surrealism to Now. (c) Denis Mortell Photography 2015

Over on facebook you can look through our installation shots of the exhibition. These include shots of Felix Gonzalez-Torres billboard work, “Untitled” (The New Plan), 1991, which was presented on six billboards across six sites within Dublin city centre in December. There are also documentation images of the live event Hot on the Heels of Love, a live nocturnal response to the exhibition curated by Pádraic E Moore. You can read a review of the night in District Magazine.

Love Blog Series

With this exhibition, in a first for IMMA, we commissioned a series of blogs about love as part of IMMA Talks. These online articles looked at themes that included how the tarot can help us explore the deeper meaning of love; how can we tell if our love is true or not; the power of love evidenced during the ground-breaking marriage equality referendum in Ireland and how we can keep our love alive through Skype.
What does the Tarot tell us about love? by Tarot Maven Danielle Vierling
Do I lie when I say I love you? by Dr Noel Kavanagh
Love’s majesty by Andrew Hyland
Global Love on Skype by Dr Rebecca Chiyoko King-O’Riain

What do the critics think? 

The Sunday Times review Crazy in Love by Cristín Leach Hughes (Paywall)
Look back at RTE News preview of the exhibition including short interviews with Christine Macel and Sarah Glennie, Director, IMMA.
The Irish Times review Crazy, big, surreal thing called love by Aidan Dunne.
Review in Le Cool by Zara Hedderman


See what other visitors think by following the #WhatWeCallLove hashtag on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.
New commissions in this exhibition are part of an exciting new initiative, New Art at IMMA. Proudly supported by Matheson this strand allows IMMA to continue to support this vital work through programming that recognises and nurtures new and emerging talent, new thinking and new forms of exhibition-making.

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How do bodies of lovers who are not together in the same space love?

In our fourth and final Love Blog, Dr Rebecca Chiyoko King-O’Riain examines “notions of love over distance and meditated by technology” in her blog Global Love on Skype. 

The Love Blog series is presented as part of the exhibition What We Call Love which runs into its final three weeks, ending on 7 February 2016.

Global Love on Skype

Attila Csörgő Make Love, 2002-2005 C-Print, 83 x 83 cm Courtesy Galerija Gregor Podnar, Berlin
Attila Csörgő, Make Love, 2002-2005, C-Print, 83 x 83 cm, Courtesy Galerija Gregor Podnar, Berlin

What we call love is shaped by a changing society – changing notions of sexuality, marriage, and increasing acceptance of same-sex couples. In this exhibition, even physical representations of love reflect different ideas about where love resides in the body – the brain, the heart, the genitals. But what effects are globalization and technology having on these collective notions and social practices of love? Are globalization and technology use making the world a smaller, more intimate place, or do they take us away from those we love?

Love is often expressed visually as two bodies that are physically close – the warmth of an embrace, the act of the kiss, the intertwining of bodies. This is implicit in many of the pieces we see in the exhibit.  Even the cold, rigid Mr. and Mrs. Woodman (Man Ray 1927-1945) are married (hence the name) and portrayed as a heterosexual couple even if enjoined wooden mannequins – they too fall in and make love. In today’s mobile, technological and global world, more people are on the move and understandings of embodiment must widen to also encompass notions of love over distance and mediated by technology. This is an important theme implicitly referenced in the exhibition – embodied love mediated by technology. How do bodies of lovers who are not together in the same space love?

Attila Csörgö’s piece, Make Love (2002-2005), pictures two figures, nominally a woman and man, standing apart with blurred electrical connections between them. The warmth of their emotion is reflected in the back and forth movement between and connecting them – love not of intertwined bodies, but love from a distance. Connection through electrical (and digital) means draws them together in love, although their bodies are separated.  There are echoes here of the use by many people of visual digital media (such as Skype or Facetime), to stay in touch with the ones they love. The use of Skype allows distant and transnational lovers to create spaces of transconnectivity, practicing simultaneous and ongoing emotional connection across vast temporal and geographic distances.

GarrettPhelan_Radio_and_Gold_Hearts[1]
Garrett Phelan, NEW FAITH LOVE SONG – Radio and Gold Hearts, 2012, Philips RL 210 Radio, 34 gold hearts (plaster/24 carrott gold leaf), black Lacobelglass, MDF. Courtesy of the artist
This affects how people ‘do’ emotions. These emotion practices can consist of storing love in technological devices such as the radio pouring its gold hearts out as in Garrett Phelan’s piece, NEW FAITH LOVE SONG—Radio and Gold Hearts, 2012. But technology can also mediate love in the present though emotional streaming, promoting ongoing interaction over distance by keeping Skype on for long periods of time. Through these attempts to try to recreate everyday loving practices via continuous use of Skype, transnational emotions of love and longing are de-intensified by leaving the webcam on all day and enabling ongoing long-distance emotional interaction.

What We Call Love_03 Leccia
Ange Leccia, Volvo, arrangement, 1986, Installation view Irish Museum of Modern Art. Photo: Denis Mortell. © Ange Leccia ADAGP

Digital affectivity facilitates our loving actions but also serves as a container for love to be used or felt at a later date. Beyond just depositing affects, moods, and dispositions into technology, people also take cold, hard, rational technology and use it to mediate love through bodily, facial, and visual expressions in their interaction and practices on line. Technology then may provide opportunities for lovers to be closer in terms of personal intimacy, allowing loved ones constant, real time, everyday access to their lives via visual technology. People use Skype as the ‘next best thing’ to being there. Skype is a form of virtual embodied love not replacing actual physical contact, but acting as a stand in until lovers could be physically together again.

Technology and emotional warmth are often juxtaposed ironically, for example, in the cars kissing at the beginning of the exhibit. Behind this irony though is a deeper truth that it is increasingly, through these cold hard technologies of light and wire, that love is mediated and embodied and that lovers are connected.


Sociology - Rebecca King O RiainDr. Rebecca Chiyoko King-O’Riain is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Maynooth University. Her research interests are in emotions, technology and globalization; race/ethnicity and critical race theory; people of mixed descent, beauty, and Japanese Americans. She has published in Global Networks, Ethnicities, Sociology Compass, Journal of Asian American Studies, Amerasia Journal, Irish Geography and in many edited books. She is the lead editor of Global Mixed Race (New York University Press). Her book Pure Beauty: Judging Race in Japanese American Beauty Pageants (University of Minnesota Press) examined the use of blood quantum rules in Japanese American Beauty Pageants. She is currently researching and writing about ‘The Globalization of Love’.

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There are three things about love I’m certain of

In our final blog of 2015 and as part of our Love Blog series, Andrew Hyland looks back to 23 May 2015 when the ground breaking Marriage Equality Referendum received a Yes vote in his article Love’s majesty.
This is the third blog in the Love Blog series, in association with the exhibition What We Call LoveComing to you in the New Year is our fourth and final piece; Global Love on Skype, by Dr Rebecca Chiyoko King-O’Riain


Love’s majesty

Joe Caslin mural
Joe Caslin, The Claddagh Embrace, 2015, Marriage Equality Mural, Dublin’s South Great George’s Street

There are three things about love I’m certain of.
Continue reading There are three things about love I’m certain of

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Living at IMMA, an insider’s view

Laurel Bradley on life as a temporary resident at IMMA “in a shifting community of artists, critics and writers who get to stay at the museum after the big iron gates swing shut”


Notes from a Fulbright Scholar and IMMA Resident

As the first Fulbright Scholar resident at IMMA, I have the privilege of living and working on the spacious grounds of the Royal Hospital Kilmainham. In my “real life,” I am Director and Curator of the Perlman Teaching Museum at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. But in a wonderful eight-month time-out, I join IMMA’s Collections Department, taking up special projects related to photography and lens-based art works. This blog post, though, will focus on life as a temporary resident in a shifting community of artists, critics and writers who get to stay at the museum after the big iron gates swing shut.
The unique Residency Programme, providing time and studio space for emerging and established professionals to experiment, work, think, and engage with the museum staff and publics, is a dynamic complement to IMMA’s exhibitions, activities and events. The programme hosts creative types from Ireland and abroad for periods of a few weeks to several months. Lodged in one of three apartments, I will be the longest resident to date when I depart May 20, 2016.  Not all “residents” actually live at the museum; a few Dublin-based artists commute to one of the eight studios, while others settle into an apartment or a bedroom in the Flanker, a communal house at the east end of the two former coach houses just across from Barry Flanagan’s giant joyous hare.

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Entrance to IMMA; Studio Block under Supermoon

Continue reading Living at IMMA, an insider’s view

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Do I lie when I say I love you?

In the second of our Love Blog series, in association with the exhibition What We Call Love, Dr Noel Kavanagh asks the question Do I lie when I say I love you? Make sure to check out Noel’s nominated pop song in his concluding reflection.
Our third Love Blog, Love’s Majesty by Andrew Hyland, coming up next week.


 

Louise Bourgeois, Couple
Louise Bourgeois, The Couple, 2002, (Detail view), Glass, beads, fabric and steel 68 x 55.9 x 30.5 cm / 26 ¾ x 22 x 12 in, Private Collection. Courtesy Hauser & Wirth

For the love of Mod

As both a Mod and a philosopher who likes to talk of love, I am obsessed with lost origins. Mods are entirely engrossed in the pursuit of the ‘original’ of the species: we speculate as to who was ‘the first’, those original mods who began the style and because it is a lost origin we endlessly try to repeat what is not there. In doing so create versions of an absent form never actually made apparent. It is the differánce of mod and then perhaps modernists were always…well, post-modernists. Yet we endlessly get into arguments amongst ourselves whether something is unique, authentic and then ‘properly’ mod: the greatest complement one can be given is that someone would refer to you as a ‘proper’ mod.

It appears that I may love you (or not, as the case may be!)

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Douglas Gordon, Forever two part, 2000, 2 × C-print, 43.2 × 53.3 cm / 17 × 21 in each COURTESY THE ARTIST AND UNTILTHENGALLERY, PARIS. © STUDIO LOST

Continue reading Do I lie when I say I love you?

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Affordable Art this Christmas. IMMA Editions

One of Ireland’s best kept secrets, the IMMA Editions are a range of limited edition art prints, all exclusive to IMMA. A great opportunity to buy affordable art this Christmas the Editions include work by Sean Scully, Patrick Scott, Alice Maher, Dorothy Cross , Isabel Nolan, Etel Adnan, Isaac Julien, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Barrie Cooke and many more. Signed by the artist and released in a limited, numbered series, IMMA Editions start at just €100. An exclusive new edition by Irish artist Grace Weir, who currently has a major solo show at the Museum, will be released before Christmas.

Become an IMMA Member today and enjoy a 30% Discount on the listed price for Editions during the month of December. In addition to enjoying a special 30% discount on Editions this December, any new or gift memberships taken out this month will go into a prize draw to win an IMMA Edition by either Dorothy Cross or Isaac Julien.

In the blog below we highlight some of our favourite IMMA Editions, particularly those that have very limited editions remaining.

Continue reading Affordable Art this Christmas. IMMA Editions