A 1916 Commemorative Visual Arts Project through Printmaking
Little Museum of Dublin, 16 – 25 January 2016
The Leinster Printmaking Studio, Clane, Co Kildare, with support from the Kildare County Council Arts and Library Services are launching their year-long programme of exhibitions and workshops in the Little Museum of Dublin, on Saturday 16 January 2016 at 5.00p.m. Fifty Printmakers from eight Printmaking Studios around Ireland have accepted an invitation to participate in the project, which aims to create awareness of little known events or incidents during or around the time of the Easter Rising in 1916.
Beginning with the exhibition in the Little Museum of Dublin, St Stephen’s Green, which runs from the 16 – 25 January, the project will tour libraries and other venues in Dublin, Kildare, Wicklow, Cork, Galway and Donegal during the year. In most venues the exhibition will be accompanied by a workshop for adults and/or children. (See www.littlestorieslittleprints.com)
The prints, along with the stories, incidents or events that inspired them, can be viewed on the website.
The project is also being supported by Dublin City Public Libraries.
Participating Artists:
Brian Barry, Margaret Becker, Alice Beresford, Pamela de Brí, Melissa Cherry, Shane Crotty, Siobhán Cuffe, John Curran, Monica deBath, Morgan Doyle, William Finnie, Brian Fitzgerald, Paula Fitzpatrick, Angelina Foster, Rachel Fountain, Claire Halpin, Alice Hanratty, Sylvia Hemmingway, Barbara Hannigan, Val Hennigan, Rebecca Homfray, Charles Hulgraine, Siobhan Hyde, Margaret Irwin, Eileen Keane, Pauline Keena, Ger Kennedy, Andy Kilty, Brian Lalor, Jenny Lane, Anne McDonnell, Ann McKenna, Bernadette Madden, Fiona Marron, Mo Montgomery, Bríd Ní Rinn, Bríd óg Norrby, Suzannah O’Reilly, Geraldine O’Reilly, Paul Roy, Deirdre Shanley, Constance Short, Dorothy Smith, Fifi Smith, Katherine Smits, Ruby Staunton, Michele Sweetman, Margaret Tuffy and Dominic Turner.
‘Poster Boys’ at the National Print Museum in Dublin’s Beggars Bush is an exhibition of fifty-six original Abbey Theatre posters from the 1970s and 1980s.
Growing up in Derry, Locky Morris lived under the kind of hyper-surveillance that has gradually become the norm worldwide.
There were 2,700 submissions to this year’s Royal Ulster Academy (RUA) exhibition, from which 353 were selected.