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Creative presents from IMMA this Christmas

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As Christmas approaches we’re all looking for great present ideas for loved one near and far. If you want to give something really unique, why not consider giving art as a gift this christmas? Not only will you be buying irish, and giving a really creative gift, you’ll also be supporting our work at IMMA through your purchase. Prices start from as little as €25 and we have a great selection of art books, art works, art products or a year-long art experience from IMMA.

Limited Editions

IMMA EditionsIf you have an art lover in your life we have a beautiful selection of Limited Edition works, all created for us by IMMA exhibition artists. These artist works are created in strictly limited series, each individually numbered so that you know your gift is unique to you. Prices start at €95 and include photographs, prints and watercolours from irish artists such as Patrick Scott, Louis le Brocquy, Dorothy Cross, Gerard Byrne and Isabel Nolan and International Artists Linder, Isaac Julien, Juan Usle and Apichatpong Weerasethakul.

IMMA Editions, pictured left to right; Dorothy Cross, Rugby Ball, 2005 (detail), Patrick Scott, Untitled, 2009 (detail) Isaac Julien, Hate/Love, 2006 (detail), Linder, Migration of Symbols, 2014 (detail), Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Power Boy, 2011, Isabel Nolan, Heliosphere, 2014 (detail)

IMMA Art Books

shopbooksAnother great gift option for the creative in your life is an IMMA art book. We have a great range both online, and in our bookshop; from beautifully illustrated large volumes like The Moderns: The Arts in Ireland from the 1900s to the 1970s, to individual artist books such as Alice Maher – Becoming, Patrick Scott – Image Space Light, Dorothy Cross- Connemara, Barrie Cooke and striking photography books from the David Kronn collection: Out of the Darkroom and the new 2014 publication Second Sight.

Browse our full collection of IMMA Publications online>

Dorothy Cross special package

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To celebrate Trove we have a very special offer this Christmas, where you can purchase Dorothy Cross’ Limited Edition Rugby Ball (2005) (RRP €250) plus her most recent catalogue Connemara (RRP €25) and the limited edition set of 8 postcards from Trove (RRP €10) for a combined cost of €260.

Give the gift of Membership

If you want to give the gift of an experience that your loved one can use throughout the year why not become an IMMA member? Members get access to exclusive events, free entry to all IMMA exhibitions (many of our exhibitions are free but some carry an admission fee), exclusive access to the curators and artists behind our programme, and discounts in our shop and cafe. Membership starts at €50 (or €30 concession) and if you gift a membership this Christmas you too can avail of the members discount on all shop items, including the Limited Editions. Email [email protected] or visit our members web page for more details and how to buy online.

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Curators Voice:: Mobile Encounters: Documenting the Early Years of Performance Art in Ireland

Alastair MacLennan, Lie To Lay (1986) Performance at Roseberry Crescent, Newcastle upon Tyne. Alastair MacLennan Archive, Locus + archive, Newcastle. © Alastair MacLennan
Alastair MacLennan, Lie To Lay (1986) Performance at Roseberry Crescent, Newcastle upon Tyne. Alastair MacLennan Archive, Locus + archive, Newcastle. © Alastair MacLennan

Mobile Encounters opened on Friday 12th December at 6.00pm with a live performance by artist Dominic Thorpe, somebody else’s mouth (2014). The exhbition marks the beginnings of a fruitful collaboration between IMMA and the National Irish Visual Arts Library (NIVAL).  Séamus McCormack, Project Co-ordinator: Exhibitions, IMMA, tells us a little more about the project.
Continue reading Curators Voice:: Mobile Encounters: Documenting the Early Years of Performance Art in Ireland

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Christmas Flash Sale this week on Patrick Scott, Dorothy Cross, Isobel Nolan and others.

Limited Editions
Pictured left to right; Dorothy Cross, Rugby Ball, 2005 (detail), Patrick Scott, Untitled, 2009 (detail) Isaac Julien, Hate/Love, 2006 (detail), Linder, Migration of Symbols, 2014 (detail), Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Power Boy, 2011, Isabel Nolan, Heliosphere, 2014 (detail)

For this week only; 1-7 December 2015, we are offering a significant discount of 30% on our IMMA Editions; limited edition works on paper from IMMA artists. Works by irish artists Patrick Scott, Dorothy Cross, Isabel Nolan and international artists such as Linder, Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Issac Julien are available among many others. You can read a description of these featured works below, or as an IMMA Member, you can make an appointment to speak to, or meet with a curator to discuss your purchase by emailing [email protected] IMMA Editions are a great opportunity to acquire affordable and unique contemporary artworks from internationally recognised artists. Produced by the artists to support the IMMA programme, your purchase directly supports IMMA. This offer is open to members only, but don’t worry, if you are not a member you can join online from €50 to avail of the discounts. You can even give this new membership as a christmas gift, and still avail of the discount.  For example, the Isaac Julien work, usually priced at €350 is €245 to members this week, and the Dorothy Cross work, usually priced at €250 is just €175 this week. Browse the full Collection>
Continue reading Christmas Flash Sale this week on Patrick Scott, Dorothy Cross, Isobel Nolan and others.

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IMMA welcomes Turner Prize Winner Duncan Campbell with his first major Irish exhibition

Shot of Duncan CampbellIMMA  is currently presenting the first major exhibition in Dublin of the work of Irish-born artist Duncan Campbell, who last night won the 2014 Turner Prize, arguably the world’s most prestigious Art prize.
IMMA Director Sarah Glennie, who is also curator of his current major show at IMMA, was delighted with the win saying “Duncan Campbell is an exceptional Irish artist whose work tackles complex questions about society, politics and history with great rigour, subtltey and wit. His compelling films require time from the viewer but time spent is rewarded as his works encourage us to shift our perceptions challenge accepted truths. It’s a hugely deserved win and we are all so pleased for him. We are incredibly proud to be presenting his work at IMMA at the moment, not only his Tuner Prize winning It for Others, but also three other films; Bernadette, about unity candidate MP and socialist activist Bernadette Devlin, Make it New John and Arbeit. This major exhibition is open until March 29th, free of charge, and we look forward to continuing our relationship with Duncan in 2016”
Duncan will discuss the exhibition with Dr. Maeve Connolly (Lecturer, IADT) on Saturday 31st Janaury 2015. This is a free event but you must book your tickets in advance as capacity is limited. Book your tickets online here.
>Listen to Duncan Campbell’s reaction to his win on Morning Ireland (RTE)
> Click here for more details on the Duncan Camopbell exhbition at IMMA on our webpage

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From the Collection – Elinor Wiltshire

Marguerite O’Molloy, Assistant Curator: Collections, introduces a group of works by Elinor Wiltshire from the IMMA Collection, currently on show as part of the current IMMA Collection display Conversations.

A group of works currently on show at IMMA were selected from 12 needlepoints by Elinor Wiltshire now in the IMMA Collection. These come from a body of more than 50 counted-thread embroideries made by Wiltshire in London between 1982 and 1989. In these needlepoint pieces, Wiltshire has used either horizontally or vertically worked stitches (rather than diagonally worked stitches seen in cross-stitch for example). This apparently simple detail results in markedly different outlines.

Wiltshire IMMA.3799 Greenwich Tunnel
Elinor Wiltshire, Greenwich Tunnel under River Thames, 1987, image courtesy of the artist.

In Greenwich Tunnel, (above) the silhouetted figures have a dashed outline caused by using horizontal stitches and this adds a slight vibration to the edges of these figures; whereas in Crush Hour, the choice of vertical stitches ensures a clearly defined outline of the figures squashed like sardines in the train carriage.
Wiltshire IMMA.3801 Porchester Showers
Elinor Wiltshire, Children Showering after Swim in Porchester Pool, 1989, image courtesy of the artist.

In Porchester Pool stitches are vertical, again allowing a streamlined outline for the figures, while also alluding to falling water from the overhead showers.
Speaking about how Elinor worked, her niece Sylvia Reynolds recalls how “Elinor would see an interesting or unusual juxtaposition of people; places; animals; plants or observe an interesting incident and then she would record the images or incident as a drawing when she got home. The drawing would be simplified to a clear design. She used felt pens/coloured markers at some stage, and often used her local stationers to get copies enlarged or reduced, which she could further modify. Then Elinor transferred the design to canvas, probably by overlaying the canvas on her clearly marked design and tracing the design onto the canvas. She liked to work with wool, not synthetics! Most of her wool pictures were based on what she saw in or around London, with a few based on incidents noted when she made Irish visits. Similar designs were often also used on cards for family and friends, variously coloured or not.”
Originally from Limerick, Elinor Wiltshire (nee O’Brien) later married her husband Reginald and together they founded the Green Studios on St Stephen’s Green in the 1950s. Following her husband’ death in 1968, Elinor sold the photographic studio in Dublin and moved to London where she worked as a botanist and researcher at the Natural History Museum her research has been published in The Irish Naturalists’ Journal and other peer-reviewed journals.
Wiltshire is perhaps best-known for her photographs The Wiltshire Collection of 1000 negatives and 300 prints is held in the National Library of Ireland, and spans a twenty-year period from 1951. The bulk of the images feature Dublin, providing a view of life in the capital during that period. If Ever You Go to Dublin Town, an exhibition from the archive, took place in 1999.
Wiltshire’s paternal grandmother Florence Vere O’Brien (d. 1936) was a key figure in the revival of Limerick Lace, and helped to set up the Limerick Lace Training School in 1889, taking over complete responsibility in 1893. Florence Vere O’Brien worked with James Brenan, R.H.A. Master of the Cork School of Art, which later became the Crawford School of Art. Their aim was to make it easier for women to undertake artistic & technical training.
Elinor Wiltshire’s works are currently on view as part of Conversations, the ongoing exhibition from the IMMA Collection, now open in the West Wing (turn left at the top of the stairs in the main building).

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IMMA Event Guide, Nov 2014 – Feb 2015

Click to download the IMMA event guide, Nov 14 - Feb 15

Click to download the IMMA event guide, Nov 14 - Feb 15The IMMA Winter Event Guide is now available at the Front Desk, or you can click to read online / download.
We have five exhibitions taking place during the winter season, including Conversations; drawn from the IMMA Collection; a major solo exhibition from Turner Prize nominee Duncan Campbell and a group show; Primal Architecture which includes work from Mike Kelley / Jeremy Deller / Conrad Shawcross / Kevin Atherton / Linder / Jesse Jones / Bedwyr Williams. All three of these exhibitions are currently open and are free of charge. Opening in the coming weeks are Sound Speed Marker from Teresa Hubbard / Alexander Bircher and a very unique exhbition Trove; Dorothy Cross selects from the National Collections, sponsored by BNP Paribas.

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The Best of Frieze Week 2014

October is the month that the art world flocks to London for the week long contemporary art fair known as Frieze.  The Fair now also includes Frieze Masters where your cheque book can get you anything from a Rembrandt to a Francis Bacon.

But there’s more to ‘Frieze Week’ in London than the commercial interests of auction houses, galleries and art collectors.  October in London provides a glimpse into some of the best emerging and established contemporary art.

IMMA’s Exhibitions and Collections curators were navigating their way through Regent’s Park, Shoreditch and Bermondsey to see familiar favourites and emerging standouts alike; some soon to be shown at IMMA including Karla Black and Linder Sterling at Stuart Shave/Modern Art, Conrad Shawcross at Victoria Miro and Stan Douglas at David Zwirner.

Here are their 2014 Top Fives:

Christina Kennedy, Head of Collections

1.  Brian O’Doherty at Simone Subal, Frieze Focus
A unique collection of outstanding Conceptual and language-based artworks by Brian O’Doherty mainly from the 1960s and 70s, such as you never see in one place these days and which have now gone to various museum and private collections.  Chris Dercon described O’Doherty at Simone Subal as ‘the best in this section of Frieze.’  O’Doherty is one of those very rare Irish artists of his generation that achieved major international stature and who provides lineage for so much contemporary practice.

2.  mothers tankstation, Frieze Focus
Ara Dymond – what a find.  He is a young artist from Hawaii whose sculptural works here are made from hoodies dipped in silicone placed on transparent Perspex plinths inside of which are sand bags, floating yet weighty…a new confrontation of object and support with overtones of a showcased designer collection.
Also, Fergus Feehily’s small white panel, disappearing save for the glow of its painted sides…wonderful.

3.  Turner Prize Shortlist at Tate Britain
Dublin born Duncan Campbell is far and away the best of the Turner Prize shortlist.  The film It for Others is a tour de force that explores the documentary presentation, mechanisms of staging and the power of juxtaposed images to prompt and shape how we think about and perceive culture.  Especially striking are the Constructivist style sequences of dances in black on a white ground. Filmed from above by Campbell, with choreography by Michael Clarke.

4.  Paul Graham photography at Anthony Reynolds Gallery, Frieze

5.  Modern artists under the radar at Frieze Masters
Romare Bearden at DC Moore Gallery & Ray Johnson at Richard L. Feigen & Co. Both of these artists’ work seems to be making a comeback over the past 10-15 years and for good reason.  Their art has been under the radar for a long time, so it’s refreshing to see them at Frieze Masters, both of which have works in IMMA’s Novak O’Doherty Collection.

6.  I couldn’t choose just 5
Wolfgang Tillmans at Maureen Paley.  I especially loved his Portrait of Isa Genzken.

Rachael Thomas, Head of Exhibitions

1.  Project 88, Frieze
Great new work from India.

2.  Ed Fornieles at Chisenhale Gallery, Bethnal Green
There were children bouncing around, hot tubs bubbling away, actors as hipster parents walking around with the visitors, while adult entertainment looped on old TV sets in the corners.  It was surreal and strangely fun.

3.  Etel Adnan at White Cube, Bermondsey
Walking past the huge galleries devoted to Tracy Emin in White Cube, Adnan’s space was intimate and alive.

4.  Linder Sterling at Modern Art, Frieze
Linder Sterling’s work will be a part of IMMA’s Primal Architecture opening 7 November.  We are also really excited to have one of her Limited Editions available in the IMMA Shop!

5.  mothers tankstation, Frieze Focus
Nina Canell’s work stood out as always.

Marguerite O’Molloy, Assistant Curator: Collections

1.  Kate MacGarry, London, Frieze
MacGarry showed a strong booth focused on a single artist Goshka Macuga whose complex research-led practice demanded in-depth consideration, and the use of the booth space was really clever.  From a false wall, hung a large monochrome tapestry depicting the living room interior of one of the trustees of the MCA Chicago, where Macuga recently completed a year long residency.   The tapestry formed the theatrical backdrop to gallerists seated on adapted Eames chairs whose Perspex seats were shaped around photographs of Angela Merkel and other characters from Macuga’s Preparatory Notes for a Chicago Comedy.

2.  Franz Erhard Walther, Frieze Live
Two pieces by Franz Erhard Walther from 1968 & 1975 used the newly designed floor space of the fair really well.  Although placed prominently, some visitors seemed to ignore the space – perhaps because the performance piece was without the ubiquitous booth walls.  The area was delineated by metal floor sculpture and a plinth, both serving as elements within the performances.  These were quiet, thoughtful actions that brought a welcome stillness and contemplation to the buzz of the fair.

3.  Antony Gormley Studio
During Frieze, I did a studio visit to Antony Gormley’s.  He will soon be visiting IMMA to discuss the commissioning of Still Falling I currently installed in our First Floor Galleries.  During the visit, it was great to see the new direction his work has taken and to see the scale model for his planned solo show at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris – a booth also at Frieze  that showed a single imposing large steel structure by Gormley called Turn IV.  From his Expansion series, the sculpture gave a sense of how impressive the Ropac show will be with 62 such figures occupying a 4,700 square meter space (the gallery was formerly a factory that produced heating systems on the outskirts of Paris).

4.  Standout Sculpture at Frieze 
Sculptures by installation artists Agnieszka Kurant, Sara Sze and Lee Bul were modest in scale due to the nature of the fair, but it was nice to see their work.   Kurant’s pile of shiny coins bouncing light off the booth walls produced from 25 cent coins where the phrase “quarter dollar” was replaced by the phrase “minus one dollar.” Oh, and Michael Craig Martin’s giant scissors in the Sculpture Garden.  His painting from the IMMA Collection Eye of the Storm is currently on show at IMMA until 9 November.

5.  Artists in the IMMA Collection at Frieze
Mark Manders at Zeno X; Tim Rollins and K.O.S. at Galleria Raucci/Santa Maria; Nina Canell and Fergus Feehily at mother’s tankstation; Eva Rothschild at Stuart Shave/Modern Art; Tony Cragg at Marian Goodman Gallery; Eric Bainbridge at Workplace Gallery; and Brian O’Doherty at Simone Subul.

And a few more…

Highlights from the week also included Anselm Kiefer’s “most significant exhibition in the UK” to date at the Royal Academy of Arts (Royal Academy), Joyce Pensato at Lisson Gallery whose work sold out at the stand (ArtNews),  Idris Khan’s Nude Descending Staircase at Victoria Miro, Sigmar Polke at Michael Werner, Pakistani artist Imram Qureshi at Corvi-Mora Gallery and Helly Nahmad Gallery’s The Collector at Frieze Masters.

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IMMA Winter Opening Weekend details: Primal Architecture and Duncan Campbell

 

imma winter opening
For image credits see footer

Join us for a weekend programme of activities including the opening of our winter exhbitions Duncan Campbell and Primal Architecture, talks, tours, and music drawn from the exhibitions across IMMA.

IMMA’s Winter Opening Weekend

Friday 7 November

Preface lecture :: Primal Architecture
1pm – 2pm, Lecture Room, FREE
Mike Kelley: Lent Felt (Intimations of his Mind’s Fall), with John C Welchman
Presented in partnership with IADT ARC, this is a valedictory lecture on the life and work of Mike Kelley; artist, noise musician, writer, actor, benefactor, teacher and Catholic misfit. Kelley’s work ‘Primal Architecture’ has lent its name to the group exhbtiion, and in this lecture Kelley’s powerful contribution to contemporary art will be examined by John C. Welchamn, including his influential body of critical and creative writings and his special brand of parodic humor and irony and aesthetics.  Read more>
6.00 – 8.30pm, Official opening of Duncan Campbell and Primal Architecture. If you’d like to attend the opening please join our mailing list here (make sure you tick ‘Invitations’).

The opening of Primal Architecture includes live performances:

Kevin Atherton, Timepiece (1974–2014)
6.00 – 7.00pm, IMMA Courtyard

Bedwyr Williams, 20º (2014)
7.15pm, IMMA, First Floor, Landing

The opening reception is followed by Primal Rising, a live music and DJ night which marks the start of IMMA’s winter opening weekend.
Continue reading IMMA Winter Opening Weekend details: Primal Architecture and Duncan Campbell

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Mid-Term at IMMA : Halloween Workshops

Halloween is nearly here and IMMA has a host of workshops and activities for families and young people during the mid-term break. Following on from a successful first series during the summer holidays, the free family workshop Mornings at the Museum returns, from Tuesday 28 to Thursday 30 October and Explorer, IMMA’s on-going weekly family workshop, bookends the mid-term break on Sundays 26 October and 2 November, 2pm – 4pm.

For Young People we have a very hands-on, artist-led workshop with Felicity Clear connected to the IMMA Collection exhibition Conversations, and the fantastic Theatre Lovett, purveyors of fine theatre for children, women and men, return for their unique take on the IMMA Collection through Conversations, Exhortations, Exhaustions. See below for all the details and how to book.

Teens and Young People | 3-day Art Workshop

Tue 28 Oct – Thu 30 Oct | Artist Felicity Clear
12-15 year olds: 11am – 1pm each day
15-18 year olds: 2pm – 4pm each day
Felicity Clear leads a free mid-term art workshop, in which young people will gain insight into contemporary art practice, through visual research activities, sculpture and construction processes, and drawing. The workshop will take place in IMMA’s studios, and participants will be encouraged to explore the three-dimensional artworks included in the IMMA Collection exhibition Conversations.

Theatre Lovett | Conversations, Exhortations, Exhaustions

Louis-for-webJoin Theatre Lovett as they scale the heights, inhale the airs and stare down the graces amongst IMMA’s marvellous collection. Engage yet again with Theatre Lovett’s fearless acknowledgement of their own limits and their happy curiosity of what lies beyond, beside or within us all. What does any of this mean? Please come and hazard a guess. Loose, comfortable clothes optional but please no squeaky shoes. Ages 7+ and adults of all ages.

Morn at Museum LoRes Trish Maggie 27.08.14 SAM_0087 (640x479)Mornings at the Museum | IMMA Family

Tue 28 Oct – Thu 30 Oct | 10 – 11am each morning I Drop in
Free family workshops during the mid-term. Drop in and experience some of IMMA’s current exhibitions; then children and grown-ups can join in an art workshop based on the experience. Meet at the main IMMA reception at 10am.

 IMMA Culture Night 2014 LoResExplorer | IMMA Family

Sun 26 Oct and Sun 2 Nov | 2pm – 4pm | Drop in
Drop in to our free weekly gallery workshop where IMMA staff introduce families to an art project based on selected artworks currently on show. Explorer is drop-in, free and continues every Sunday until 7th December.

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There are also several free exhibitions open over mid-term:
Second Sight : The David Kronn Photography Collection is open in the Garden Galleries until Nov 9th and is free of charge. The exhibition is full of compelling and unusual portraits including work by Annie Leibovitz, Amelia Stein and Doug DuBois and compelling images of Ireland shot by John Hinde and Evelyn Hofer, among others. Video:: Collector David Kronn takes you through some of his favourite works

Conversations, a selection of diverse displays from the IMMA Collection,  is open in the West Wing in the main building and presents a wide selection of artists and work, including a selection of works by Brian Maguire, Guggi, Mary A. Kelly and Barrie Cooke which exemplify how certain works are acquired for the IMMA Collection. Barrie Cooke’s Bone Boxes, dating from the 1970s, and two more recent paintings, pay tribute to his recent passing.

Also exhibited is a selection of works co-curated by artist Caroline McCarthy, shown with works from McCarthy’s own studio including Group Coordination (Red), 2011, which she has reconfigured in response to the gallery architecture.
IMMA is open daily from Tuesday to Sunday, and will be open from 12noon – 5.30pm on Bank Holiday Monday, 27 October.

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Christina Kennedy on David Hendriks

Currently on view from the IMMA Collection is an exhibition of works that not only shows particular artists’ practice at a given time but also consciously draws attention to a key figure in the story of cultural production in Ireland, in this case David Hendriks and his renowned gallery.  First called the Ritchie Hendriks Gallery (as a tribute to his Hendriks’ grandmother) it was later renamed David Hendriks Gallery.
Originally from Jamaica, Hendriks came to Ireland via London to study economics at TCD.  Encouraged by friends including Cecil King and Patrick Hennessy he opened his gallery in 1956 first at 3, St Stephen’s Green and from the early 1960s at No. 119 which he ran until his death in 1983.  The early years of the Hendriks Gallery coincided with the extreme recession of the 1950s when there were very few opportunities for artists to have their work seen or less still bought.  Leo Smith was the only other gallerist who had recently opened the Dawson Gallery. Victor Waddington was in the process of moving his gallery to London. Along with some private income Hendriks set up a framing business to help subsidize the gallery’s activities.
From the beginning he showed a variety of artists as well as exhibitions of prints by Picasso and Matisse. His initial list of Irish artists included Patrick Collins, T.P.Flanagan, Patrick Pye, Cecil King, Arthur Armstrong, Colin Middleton,George Campbell and Barrie Cooke;   in the late 60’s he added Deborah Brown, Sonja Landweer and Frank Morris.  In 1963 he supported the Independent Artists Group with an exhibition New Works by Five Artists which showed Brian Bourke, Michael Kane, John Kelly, David O’Docherty and James McKenna.
Continue reading Christina Kennedy on David Hendriks