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Gerda Frömel and Diogo Pimentão

You are invited to a reception to mark the exhibition openings on Thursday 09 April 2015 from 6-8pm.

Gerda Frömel: A Retrospective
10 April – 5 July 2015

This is the first retrospective of the sculptor Gerda Frömel since 1976. Born in the former Czechoslovakia in 1931, Gerda Frömel moved to Ireland in 1956 and built her career here. An incredibly well-regarded artist during her lifetime, Frömel’s work was neglected after her untimely death in 1975. This exhibition of sculpture, drawing and archive materials, seeks to reinstate Frömel as a Master of Irish Modernism. Read more on our website

This exhibition will travel to F.E. McWilliam Gallery and Studio, Co. Down in August 2015.

Diogo Pimentão: Disequilibrium Displacement
10 April – 5 July 2015

This is the first presentation in Ireland by Diogo Pimentão (born Portugal 1973). His drawings blur the lines between sculpture, installation and performance using the simple materials of graphite, paper and stones. Through fixing and folding paper he opens the horizon of the drawing and its conventions to other dimensions, other processes and other tools. Read more on our website

Talks and lectures:
Gerda Frömel
Preview Lecture: Seán Kissane
Gerda Frömel – Her life and works 1955–1975
Thursday 9 April 2015, 5.30–6.15pm, Johnston Suite
Exhibition Curator Seán Kissane (IMMA) presents a lecture on his research for the first contemporary retrospective exhibition of work by Gerda Frömel and addresses how this presentation attempts to reinstate Frömel as a Master of Irish Modernism. This is followed by the exhibition preview and a drinks reception. Book here

IMMA Modern Master Series: Symposium
Gerda Frömel – Reconstructing an Artist’s Career
Friday 17 April, 11.00am–3.00pm, Lecture Room
A range of scholars, writers and enthusiasts on Frömel’s work will assess key developments of the artist’s short yet significant career. Speakers will consider what Frömel’s story can teach us about the broader history, record and practice of sculpture in Ireland. Chaired by Paula Murphy (Senior Lecturer, School of Art History, UCD). Other participants to be announced. Book here

Diogo Pimentão
Artist’s Gallery Talk – Diogo Pimentão
Friday 10 April, 1.00–2.00pm, Garden Galleries, IMMA
Diogo Pimentão demonstrates how his artworks of paper and graphite push the conventions and possibilities of drawing and sculpture. Book here

Booking is essential for all talks, all of which are free. For a full programme please visit www.imma.ie

IMMA Exhibitions:
Please visit our website for details of the current exhibitions at IMMA, all of which are free of charge, and our upcoming exhbitions for 2015. www.imma.ie

Gerda Frömel, River, 1970; Carrara marble in three dry-fitted elements, 56 x 30 x 10 cm; Private Collection.
Diogo Pimentão, #7 Aligned Fold, 2014; Paper and graphite, 274.5 x 31.5cm; Courtesy the Artist.

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Free Art Workshops at IMMA. Easter Holidays

Next week the Easter holidays roll around once more and we have some great activities in store at The Irish Museum of Modern Art for children of all ages.

Young People
For teenagers we offer very participative creative experiences for 12-15 year olds and 15-18 year olds. These artist-led workshops involve looking, discussing, and making, as well as engaging with IMMA’s exhibitions and Collection programmes, and working with contemporary artists.

Concrete Poetry, Rhona Byrne workshop, Helio Oiticia exhibition, Summer 2014
Concrete Poetry, Rhona Byrne workshop, Helio Oiticia exhibition, Summer 2014

This Easter join us at IMMA for a three day hands-on workshop with artist Dorothy Smith. The workshop takes place every day; in the mornings for younger teens and afternoons for 15- 18 year olds.
Tuesday 31st March to Thursday 2nd April 2015

These artist-led workshops will primarily focus on drawing in contemporary art. They’re also a great opportunity to meet an artist, discuss ideas, and make art in the IMMA studios. Participants can also explore two-dimensional artworks in the IMMA Collection exhibition Conversations.

Younger Children
IMMA has a broad range of family programmes to engage audiences of all ages
Morn at Museum LoRes Trish Bernadette Aidan 2014-08-20 10.50.02 (640x454)
Family Workshop – Mornings at the Museum
10.00 – 11.00am  | Wed 1 & Thu 2 April and Wed 8 & Thu 9 April 
Have some creative family time during the Easter holidays. Children and grown-ups can enjoy visiting an exhibition and making artworks together in the gallery. Drop into the main IMMA reception at 10am.

Family Workshop – Explorer
Sundays 2.00 – 4.00pm  | Until 28 May  (Including Easter Sunday 5 April)
Get creative together as a family, explore artworks with IMMA staff, and enjoy a hands-on workshop in the galleries. Explorer is drop-in, fun and free.

No need to book for these family workshops, just turn up on the day.

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Diving into the National Collections with Dorothy Cross

As Trove comes to a close this week we asked IMMA curator Johanne Mullan to tell us a little more about how the exhibition came into being. You can also listen to a brief introduction to Trove by IMMA Director Sarah Glennie on our IMMA Soundcloud.

Continue reading Diving into the National Collections with Dorothy Cross

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Mediator’s Voice : The Art of Conversation

The experience of art takes place between the audience and the work, and each exhibition arguably manifests itself only in the presence of the visitor, the works becoming transformed by this experience. This is particularly true of current exhibition Trove, Dorothy Cross selects from the National Collections sponsored by BNP Paribas, where Dorothy presents us with a series of objects and artworks that may appear to have no immediate connection. There are no labels, no room titles, no logical connections, leaving the visitor to discover and explore, making your own personal and sometimes strange connections between works. 

IMMA, like most art galleries, has a team of mediators that you see on every visit. Hugely knowledgeable about art in general, and each exhibition in particular, the mediators regularly give talks and tours to the public and are an invaluable support for the visitor should you wish to chat to them, and many do. Mediators are witnesses to this very transformation, and we’ve asked one of our team, Barry Kehoe, to tell us a little about his experience of this during Trove and what questions visitors raise. We quickly find that there are so many questions….

Trove ends on Sunday 8 March 2015. Admission is free. Listen to a brief introduction from IMMA Director Sarah Glennie.

It may seem like a peculiar job for some, the role of a museum invigilator.  It takes a certain kind of patience to sit in a gallery space for long hours, protecting the precious art objects from the absent minded hand of a visitor that may at any moment reach out and touch that which must not be touched.  In IMMA those of us who invigilate are called Mediators, a team comprising of artists, art historians and many other varied areas of art expertise.  The expert knowledge and experience of the gallery staff is of significant importance as we are not just there to protect the artworks we also act as a bridge or conduit to mediate between the art works and the visitors.
The Mediators facilitate talks, tours and workshops for the education programmes engaging with visitors from knee high to 90 and upwards. On occasion there are opportunities to work on exhibitions as they are being formulated and installed but more often than not we only get to see the exhibition a day or two before it opens to the public. So as we sit silently in a corner, the mediator, though at some level an informed expert, is also in many ways a visitor to the exhibition.  When an exhibition like Trove opens the mediators are as much a part of the exhibition as the objects, artefacts and artworks that have been gathered together in the gallery.  We live in the spaces along with the artworks for the duration of the exhibition and have the opportunity to contemplate the artworks, study the exhibition as a whole and observe the visitor experience first-hand, gaining many insights that only long exposure and slow viewing can achieve. This is an advantage and a luxury that most visitors to the museum cannot enjoy due to the constraints of time.
Research has shown that the average amount of time spent in front of an artwork varies from 15 to 30 seconds.  A recent article by Stephanie Rosenbloom in the New York Times titled: “The Art of Slowing Down in a Museum“, suggests one method of putting on the brakes is to take a public tour. If this is felt to be too formal there is another approach. Quite often an artwork or an exhibition demands more than just to be observed and this seems to be the case with Trove. Many visitors are prompted to spontaneously initiate conversations, expressing how they feel about a piece or to ask a question about a particular object. Simply engaging in a conversation with a mediator can often be the best way to enhance the visitor experience of the exhibition.
016_IMMA_Trove
For example last week I found myself in deep analysis with a doctor as we puzzled over the whale skulls in the Basement Room of the Trove exhibition. We were trying to discern whether the Whale skulls from the Natural History Museum were upside down or not.  We talked about the comparative anatomy and the articulation of the vertebrae and the skull in mammalian skeletons.  Neither of us an expert in Whale biology, never the less, we were both fully committed to solving the mystery of what we were looking at.  This was a contrast to the next visitor who asked a question. A young girl of 7 or 8 had come to the exhibition with her mother.  When I warned her mother that there was a real life male nude posing in one of the adjoining rooms she decided to skip the room. However, once her daughter heard that there was something she wasn’t allowed to see she began to protest quite vocally at her mother’s imposed censorship. Very quickly it became evident there was only going to be one course of action taken.  After much protest the girl’s mother rolled her eyes and acquiesced to her daughter’s demands and they entered the room.  Shortly afterward they returned, the girl who had been very vocal was now silent with a very puzzled look on her face.  As they were leaving she turned to me and asked very directly:  “Why can we see his bum?” As I desperately searched for an appropriate answer her mother replied, shaking her head with an air of resignation and said, “There’s going to be so many questions.”
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Barry Kehoe is an Independent Curator and Art Writer. He also works in the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) facilitating talks, tours and workshops for the museum’s various education programmes.
He holds a BA in English and History (UCC); an MA in Drama and Theatre Studies (UCD); a higher Diploma in Arts Administration (UCD); A Certificate in Journalism (City and Guilds) ; A Certificate in Drawing and Visual Investigation (NCAD); and an MA in Visual Culture – Art in the Contemporary World (NCAD).
While also performing in the fields of Music and Fine Art Drawing Barry has written for various visual art publications including the Visual Artists Ireland – News Sheet, Art in the Contemporary World, Critical Bastards and the MART Gallery.
The featured image Reading Ulysses (2006) comes from a solo exhibition of Barry’s drawings shown in the Signal Arts Centre in Bray, Co. Wicklow in 2006.

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IMMA Announces 2015 Programme Highlights

Images: (1) Stan Douglas, Powell Street Grounds, 28 January 1912, 2008. Digital C-print mounted on Dibond aluminum. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner, New York. (2) Karla Black, Practically in Shadow, 2013. Plaster powder, powder paint, florist foam, bath bombs, nail varnish, polythene, thread, cellophane, sellotape. Courtesy the artist.

IMMA, The Irish Museum of Modern Art, is pleased to announce highlights from our 2015 exhibition programme.

In announcing details of the programme today Sarah Glennie, Director of IMMA, commented:

“We are delighted to present another dynamic programme for Ireland in 2015, where a key highlight is sure to be the autumn exhibition What We Call Love, co-curated by Rachel Thomas, Head of Exhibitions at IMMA and Christine Macel, Chief Curator at Centre Pompidou. It will include works from Cecily Brown, Miriam Cahn, Elmgreen and Dragset, Jim Hodges, Jeremy Shaw and Wolfgang Tillmans among others and we are delighted to be working with the Pompidou again after our successful collaboration in 2013 with the Eileen Grey exhibition.”

“Over the course of the year we will mount the first major Irish exhibitions from internationally renowned artists Stan Douglas and Karla Black, as well as an exhibition of the work of poet, artist and writer Etel Adnan; one of the leading voices in contemporary Arab American literature since the 1960s. As part of our commitment to supporting new artists we present Chloe Dewe Mathews, a remarkable new artistic voice working in the medium of photography and Diogo Pimentão in their first Irish exhibitions, as well as a number of new commissions forming part of What We Call Love.”

“I’m delighted to be presenting a major exhibition by Grace Weir, one of Ireland’s most distinctive and important contemporary artists, and continuing our scholarly appraisal of Modern Irish Art with our forthcoming retrospective of the work of Gerda Frömel (1931 – 1975). As in 2014 our exhibition programme will be accompanied by a rich and varied programme of events, talks, and learning programmes which will provide audiences of all ages exciting opportunities to enjoy the our programme.”

IMMA Collection
There are several exhibitions throughout the year that draw from the IMMA Collection. In the spring we present Fragments, with works from Aleanna Egan, Ronan McCrea, Alan Phelan, Camille Souter, GILBERT & GEORGE, Nigel Rolfe, Marina Abramovic, Brian O’Doherty and Kenneth Hall. This will be followed in November with artist Nick Miller’s response to the Edward McGuire studio, part of the IMMA Collection, in Meetings: Into the Studio of Edward McGuire. A concurrent exhibition, Approaches to Paper, will explore the practice of celebrated Irish Modernists such as Evie Hone and Mainie Jellett to contemporary artists such as Antony Gormley, Andrew Folan and Kiki Smith.

FESTIVAL
Our new festival Summer Rising, which was such a success last year, will return in June with more art, music, performance and food events designed to open up the beautiful buildings and grounds of IMMA, day and night.
IMMA Exhibition Highlights 2015
Continue reading IMMA Announces 2015 Programme Highlights

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You are invited to experience ROADKILL

Sandra Davoren, Hybrid 1, 2014 mixed media. Image courtesy the artist. © Sandra Davoren

primal evite
IMMA is hosting ROADKILL on Thu 12th February; an evening of live performance, installation, video and music by multi-disciplinary artists, programmed in parallel to the Primal Architecture exhibition. Featuring artists Jenny Brady , Sandra Davoren, Elaine Leader, Eoghan Ryan, Smilin’ Kanker and Przem SHREM Zając the night will also mark the launch of the Primal Architecture  publication. We asked  Séamus McCormack, Project Coordinator of Exhibitions at IMMA, to tell us more about this project and how it connects with the overall exhibition.

Essentially a footnote to the Primal Architecture exhibition, ROADKILL presents alternative, opposing and contradictory explorations of instinctual and primal concerns. The project presents a diversification of propositions exploring themes of framing, duality, structure, sexuality and appropriation, and the artists involved employ devices such as collage, remix and disruption.
Continue reading You are invited to experience ROADKILL

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Duncan Campbell. Special offer for IMMA Members

Duncan Campbell, winner of the 2014 Turner Prize, is speaking at IMMA on Saturday 31st January at 2pm. Duncan will be discussing his current exhibition at IMMA with Dr Maeve Connolly (Lecturer, IADT).  This free event is now booked out, but we do have a very limited number of tickets that we are making available to new (and renewing) IMMA Members.

Here’s how it works. If you join, or renew, as an IMMA member in the next 7 days you are eligible to be in the draw for these 5 pairs of tickets. You can find out how to join on our website here. Memberships start at €30, for which you’ll receive a host of other benefits including discounts in the shop and cafe and free admission to any of our ticketed exhbitions at IMMA.

 

Shot of Duncan Campbell
Once you have joined send an email to [email protected] to let us know you’d like to be in the draw. We’ll select the winners next Thursday afternoon, the 29th Jan 2015.

If you can’t make the talk on the day don’t worry, we will be recording it and we’ll make the audio available on our soundcloud page in a couple of weeks.

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Happy Christmas from IMMA

IMMA Christmas

We want to wish all our visitors a very Happy Christmas and a joyous 2015.  We are closed tomorrow and we reopen on Saturday 27th of December at 12noon. You can find more details of our Christmas Opening Hours below.

Christmas Opening Hours 2014
24-26 Dec:          Closed
27-28 Dec:          Open 12noon–5.30pm
29 Dec:                Closed
30,31 Dec,1 Jan: Open12noon–5.30pm

We want to take this opportunity to thank you all for your support in 2014 which was one of our busiest years to date. We look forward to welcoming even more vistors to IMMA in 2015.

We are open most days between Christmas and New Years and our current exhibitions are all free. All of the current exhbitions are open into February (some continue into March) and we will be announcing our 2015 programme early in the year.

You can find more details on each of the current exhibition by clicking on the links below.

Current Exhibitions at IMMA

>arrow link Duncan Campbell
>arrow linkPrimal Architecture Mike Kelley, Jeremy Deller, Conrad Shawcross, Kevin Atherton, Linder, Jesse Jones and Bedwyr Williams
>arrow link TROVE: Dorothy Cross selects from the National Collections. Sponsored by BNP Paribas.
>arrow linkIMMA Collection: Conversations
>arrow linkTeresa Hubbard / Alexander Birchler: Sound Speed Marker.
>arrow linkMobile Encounters: Documenting the Early Years of Performance Art in Ireland

Festive good wishes from everyone at IMMA!

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IMMA Collection, Conversations. Elaine Reichek and Helen Chadwick

Marguerite O’Molloy, Assistant Curator: Collections, talks about the current IMMA Collection display Conversations, and the recent introduction of works from Elaine Reichek and Helen Chadwick to the exhibition.

When we selected and installed the current display from the IMMA Collection; entitled Conversations, we planned to make changes to certain rooms at some point during the exhibition. Decisions as to what would be changed, and when, were left open at that point, to allow curatorial staff a degree of flexibility to respond to the wider programme, or to current events. This is a new way of working with the Collection that gives us the scope to be more responsive, rather than limit ourselves to a single, long-term hang. It as allows us to introduce new works and, over time, places more works on display for visitors to experience

With that in mind, we recently took the opportunity to change one room in the West Wing, removing Andrew Vickery’s work Do you know what you saw (pictured above). The room was then re-hung with two works: Elaine Reichek Chiricahua Apaches, 1992 and Helen Chadwick Untitled, 1991, which joined woolworks by Elinor Wiltshire, already on display in this room, creating interesting dialogues between artistic practices.

Reichek_Elaine with Wiltshire Elinor
Elinor Wiltshire Cleric and Swan by Grand Union Canal, London, 1986 and Elaine Reichek, Chiricahua Apaches, 1992 (installation shot 2015)

The Selection Process

The selection of Reichek’s piece was informed by two projects currently on show at IMMA, Trove, Dorothy Cross selects from the National Collections sponsored by BNP Paribas, and Duncan Campbell, both of which demonstrate an interest in what we chose to collect, and how we then display it.

Trove looks anew at objects considered to be of great importance, placing them on display for the visitor to consider and experience from the unique perspective of an artist, in this case Dorothy Cross. Also, currently at IMMA is Duncan Campbell’s Turner Prize winning film It for Others, in which he uses African sculptures. The ethnographic objects in Campbell’s film are in fact replicas of Museum artefacts. The original objects were not released to him for his film, so he worked with model makers – this in itself is an interesting story, which Campbell touches on in this guardian interview.

It For Others 1 resized
Duncan Campbell, It For Others, 2013, film still, 16mm film and analogue video transferred to digital video, 54’, Courtesy of the artist and Rodeo Gallery, Istanbul/London.

Research into Museum Collections is integral to all three artists’ practices. It was Reichek’s research into the picture files of The Museum of Natural History in New York that led her to the images that she uses to make Chricahua Apaches. Campbell and Reichek share an interest in how identity is formed, particularly how manipulated images are used to communicate nationhood, but it was Dorothy Cross’s interest in the pairing of object and image that cemented the idea to show Reichek at this time.

Storage and Archive

Bringing any work out of storage starts with research into our IMMA Collection archive files, which are crammed with press cuttings, correspondence, faxes and other exhibition materials. These files provide invaluable information on the artworks themselves, and also documents IMMA’s unique relationship with each artist over time. IMMA’s collection is still very new, just twenty three years in the making, and our correspondence with living artists is ongoing, meaning our archive about collected works is ever-growing. Our contemporary collection now amounts to some 1700 works. Elaine Reichek Chiricahua Apaches, 1991 purchased in 1992, has an acquisition number of “IMMA.90” indicating that it was in the first hundred works that IMMA acquired.

The archive file contained rich material relating to Elaine Reichek’s solo exhibition at IMMA in 1993 titled Home Rule, including this double sided sheet (pictured below) which served both as gallery floorplan and exhibition guide. A fax dated 4th July 1994, from Ruth Ferguson, Curator of Collections at the time, indicates that Reichek also exhibited at IMMA as part of a 1994-1995 season of exhibitions entitled From Beyond the Pale. Further research into IMMA’s Exhibition archives might therefore reveal even more information.

home rule floorplan 2
The works in Home Rule were all given numbers suggesting that the curator intended the works to be seen in a particular order.
home rule floorplan
The Exhibition Guide text from ‘Home Rule’ is an artist’s statement by Reichek, while the letterhead carries the former Museum logo: a black and white detail photograph of the colonnades of the Royal Hospital.

 

REICHEK1_IMMA
The gallery floorplan shows that the original hanging position of Chiricahua Apaches was on First Floor East Wing corridor. This is also borne out by an installation shot from our image archive.

Subsequent to these two exhibitions, a number of closely-related works were acquired for the IMMA Collection —Chiricahua Apaches, and Silver Photograph I and Silver Photograph II. All can found on IMMA Collection online.

REICHEK2_IMMA
Silver Photograph I, 1991, Black and White photograph, 101 x 147 cm Donated by the artist, 1993 IMMA.438

Collection Conversations

Elaine Reichek lives and works in New York City. In preparation to install the work, I was in close contact with her to discuss various details found in the file. Elaine was involved in planning this current installation of the piece, including supplying a crucial missing element which was required to complete the installation.

reichek_elaine installed 2015
Elaine Reichek, Chiricahua Apaches, 1992, installation view, IMMA, 2015

The artist also gave feedback on the wall text I had drafted, adding important details which appear in this final text (pdf)

Wiltshire IMMA.3799 Greenwich Tunnel
Elinor Wiltshire, Greenwich Tunnel under River Thames, 1987, Wool, Courtesy of the artist.      Read more on the IMMA Collection Online

During our correspondence, I also told Elaine about the other works by Helen Chadwick and Elinor Wiltshire that we were showing in the room with her own work. She sent me this enthusiastic and warm comment I am only familiar with Elinor Wiltshire’s photography and would love to see some images of her work in wool. I am a big fan of Helen Chadwick’s work and the pairing is inspired.”  In this way our dialogue continues, with knowledge being shared back and forth between Museum and artist’s studio. (If you are interested in Wiltshire’s work you can read more about the works currently on show in IMMA )

The other work in the room is by Conceptual artist and femininist Helen Chadwick who was reknowned for pairing of opposites, employing unconventional pocesses to create aesthetically beautiful works. In Piss Flowers 1991–92 (shown by Richard Saltoun Gallery at Frieze Sculpture Park 2013), Chadwick cast sculptures from interior spaces created by warm urine in snow. In Adore >< Abhor (pictured below), the work currently exhibited in IMMA, the close relationship between attraction and repulsion is explored here through the use of word play. Two words, adore and abhore – antonyms or opposites for each – are mirrored typographically on the page.

chadwick_helen cropped
Helen Chadwick, Adore >< Abhor, 1994

The artist’s individual title for this image is Adore >< Abhor, using the mathematical symbols for ‘greater than’ and ‘less than’. A related work, Adore; Abhor, 1994 was recently shown in MAD BAD SAD at the Freud Museum London.

Conversations, an ongoing exhibition from the IMMA Collection, is now open in the West Wing (turn left at the top of the stairs in the main building).

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Hubbard / Birchler: Sound Speed Marker

Hubbard / Birchler: Sound Speed Marker

Hubbard / Birchler: Sound Speed Marker
5 December 2014 – 4 May 2015

Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler have been working collaboratively in video, photography and sculpture since 1990. Their work invites suggestive, open-ended reflections on memory, place and cinema. Sound Speed Marker is their first exhibition in Ireland and will present their recently completed trilogy of films in a changing display from December 2014 through to Spring 2015. Each film interweaves and unpacks layers of cinema history.

Grand Paris Texas, considers the physical and social space of a dead cinema, a forgotten song and the inhabitants of a small town. Movie Mountain (Méliès), explores the residue of cinema and social terrain around the site of Movie Mountain in West Texas for the origin of the mountain’s name. Giant interweaves signs of life and vistas of a decaying movie set in Texas: the Reata mansion from the 1956 Warner Bros. film Giant starring Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson and James Dean. This presentation is the European premiere of the completed Trilogy.
Grand Paris Texas: 4 December 2014 – 11 January 2015
Movie Mountain: 16 January – 1 March 2015
Giant: 6 March – 4 May 2015

Talks: 
Artists’ Conversation | Teresa Hubbard + Alexander Birchler
Saturday 7 March 2015, 2.00–3.00pm, Lecture Room, IMMA
Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler discuss their exhibition Sound Speed Marker with Seán Kissane (Curator, Exhibitions, IMMA).
Artists’ Response | Gerard Byrne + Sarah Pierce


Wednesday 18 March 2015, 6.30–7.30pm, Lecture Room, IMMA

Artists Gerard Byrne and Sarah Pierce discuss ideas of past-tense fictions and ready-made dramas in response to the film works of Teresa Hubbard/Alexander Birchler.
Booking is essential. Free tickets are available online at www.imma.ie

IMMA Exhibitions:
For details on the current exhibitions at IMMA, all of which are free of charge, please visit our website www.imma.ie
hblogos

This project is made in collaboration with Ballroom Marfa, Texas
Teresa Hubbard / Alexander Birchler, Production still, Giant (2014), Photo Credit: Chris Austin, Courtesy of Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York and Lora Reynolds Gallery, Austin