MENUCLOSE

Opening Hours

Full opening hours

Location

Royal Hospital Kilmainham
Dublin 8, D08 FW31, Ireland
Phone +353 1 6129900

View Map

Find us by

  • Booking required Free

Join us for an evening with visionary artist, poet, and activist Cecilia Vicuña to mark the opening of her landmark solo exhibition, Reverse Migration, a Poetic Journey, at IMMA.

Vicuña is internationally celebrated for her ground-breaking multidisciplinary practice, where visual art, poetry, sound, and performance meet to explore urgent questions of ancestry, ecological crisis, and collective survival. As Vicuña describes her work “dwells in the not yet — the future potential of the unformed — where sound, weaving, and language interact to create new meanings.”

The exhibition at IMMA emerges from Vicuña’s profound discovery of her ancestral ties to Ireland and her poetic return from the Andes to Irish coastlines. Inspired by her 2006 visit with her partner, poet James O’Hern, to honour Ireland’s archaeological sites with rituals of gratitude. Hear more about several newly commissioned site-specific works, that entwines personal memory, indigenous traditions, and Irish cultural heritage into a rich layered narrative of belonging and transformation. Works include site-specific quipu — an ancient Andean system of knotted cords — created with local makers and referencing the symbolic patterns of the Aran sweater. Reverse Migration, a Poetic Journey provides a monumental meditation on survival and interconnectedness amid global ecological and political upheaval, where poetry, sound and immersive installation are integral to Vicuña’s artistic language.

The evening features poetry readings selected from their new poetry book Mapping the Silence, a moderated conversation with Vicuña and O’Hern, and a curatorial introduction by Mary Cremin, Head of Programming at IMMA. This provides a rare opportunity to engage with one of today’s most influential artist voices, and coincides with the exhibition preview and launch of Dublin Gallery Weekend taking place at IMMA on the same evening.


About Speakers

Cecilia Vicuña is a poet, artist, activist and filmmaker whose work addresses pressing concerns of the modern world, including ecological destruction, human rights, and cultural homogenization. Born and raised in Santiago de Chile, she has been in exile since the early 1970s, after the military coup against the president Salvador Allende. In London, she was a co-founder of Artists for Democracy in l974.

She coined the term “Arte Precario” in the mid-1960s in Chile, as a new independent and non-colonized category for her precarious works composed of debris, structures that disappear in the landscape, which include her quipus (knot in Quechua), envisioned as poems in space. Vicuña has re-invented the ancient Pre-Columbian quipu system of non-writing with knots through ritual acts that weave the urban landscape, rivers and oceans, as well as people, to re-construct a sense of unity and awareness of interconnectivity. These works bridge art and poetry as a way of “hearing an ancient silence waiting to be heard.” Her poetry and Palabrarmas (word-weapons) stem from a deep enquiry into the roots of language. Her early work as a poet in the 60’s was simultaneously celebrated by avant-garde poetry magazines as El Corno Emplumado, Mexico City (l961–1968), and censored and/or suppressed for many decades in Chile and Latin America.

Solo exhibitions of Vicuña’s work have been organized at a number of major institutions, including, most recently, the Museo de Bellas Artes, Santiago de Chile, Chile (2023); Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom (2022); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY (2022); Museo de Arte Miguel Urrutia (MAMU), Bogotá, Colombia (2022); Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo (CA2M), Madrid, Spain (2021); CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art, San Francisco, CA (2020); and Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City, Mexico (2020). Her work has been featured in numerous group exhibitions, including in documenta 14, Athens and Kassel (2017), and the 59th Venice Biennale (2022), and is part of major museum collections around the world.

The author of more than 30 volumes of art and poetry published in the United States, Europe, and Latin America, her most recent books are: PALABRARmas, USACH, Editorial de la Universidad de Santiago (2023); Word Weapons, Co-published by RITE Editions and Wattis Institute, San Francisco (2023);  Libro Venado, Direcciones, Buenos Aires (2022); Sudor de Futuro, Altazor, Chile (2021); Cruz del Sur, Lumen Chile (2020), Minga del Cielo Oscuro, CCE, Chile (2020), and New & Selected Poems of Cecilia Vicuña, edited and translated by Rosa Alcalá, Kelsey Street Press (2018), among many others.

Cecilia Vicuña was the winner of the 2023 Premio Nacional de Artes Plásticas 2023, one of the most prestigious awards given by her homeland. Preceding this recognition, Vicuña was elected a foreign honorary member of the United States Academy of Arts and Letters and also received the Gold Lion for Lifetime Achievement in 2022 at the 59th Venice Biennale. More details here

James O’Hern is a poet, researcher of prehistoric art and a producer of films relating to ancient cultures. He was born in Laredo, Texas, on April 17, 1933. He studied at Southern Methodist University, the University of California at Los Angeles, and New York University. O’Hern is the author of Honoring the Stones (Curbstone Press, 2004). He is also a filmmaker and has collaborated with the performance artist and poet Cecilia Vicuña on multiple projects. With Vicuña, he is the president and cofounder of Oysi, Inc. a non-profit corporation dedicated to preserving indigenous and oral cultures worldwide. He lives in New York City. More details here

Mary Cremin is Head of Programming at IMMA and was previously Director of Void Gallery, Derry since 2017, where she has supported artists to produce and present ground-breaking new works, including commissioning the artist Helen Cammock’s Turner Prize winning film The Long Note. Cremin was the Commissioner and Curator of the Irish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale with artist Eva Rothchild in 2019. Working with organisations such as the Afghan Visual Arts & History Collective and Beirut Art Residency, her programme focuses on revealing new narratives and histories that address and challenge the disparities that exist within Western culture, her programme acts as a curatorial corrective. Her areas of research are embedded in ecology, ethics and is informed by politically and socially engaged practice.