REMOTE JOY REVIEW - PAPER VISUAL IRELAND
"There is something valuable about this provisionality, an improvisational meeting of expedience and emergency."
For those who may have missed our first virtual show, Remote Joy, Paper Visual Art gave an in depth review of the work, format and relationship between the gallery and the audience. The show marked an important link between our artists, audience and physical space. Featuring new work by artists Alan Butler, Aoife Shanahan, Caroline McCarthy, Constant Dullaart, Damien Flood, David O’Reilly, Fergus Martin, John Graham, Kirstin Arndt, Mark Joyce and Ronan McCrea.
The link to that review can be found below;
http://papervisualart.com/2020/07/09/remote-joy-green-on-red-gallery-dublin-1-and-online-14-may-28-june-2020/
NIAMH MCCANN SHORTLISTED FOR VENICE BIENNALE
Green On Red Artist Niamh McCann has been shortlisted for the Irish representative for the Venice Biennale. Niamh's work includes sculpture, installation, painting and video, explores philosophical riddles/conundrums through seemingly random visual juxtapositions and spatial relationships, looking toward themes of travel, globalization and urbanization.
For more info on Niamh's work please follow the link to her website below:
www.niamhmccann.com
TYNDALL'S BLUES - VISUAL CARLOW
Mark Joyce and Fergal Dowling
23 July - 18 October
Tyndall’s Blues is an artistic collaboration between visual artist Mark Joyce and composer Fergal Dowling which responds to the transparent skin of Visual Carlow.
Tyndall’s Blues uses blue light and intermittent ‘refracted' sound to explore the work of Carlow, Leighlinbridge born John Tyndall (1820-93), the brilliant nineteenth-century experimental physicist, alpinist, progressive public intellectual and gifted science educator.
Mark Joyce explores the anomalies and phenomenological strangeness of our optical experience, with ideas drawn from scientific and philosophical concepts of physical light. He studied Painting at the Royal College of Art, London, has had solo exhibitions in Ireland, UK, and the USA, won awards from The British Council, Thomas Damman Trust, and the Georgette Chen fellowship in 2016. His work is in the collections of the IMMA and the Arts Council of Ireland.
For more info on the exhibition, follow the link to the Visual Carlow website below:
https://www.visualcarlow.ie/exhibitions/info/tyndalls-blues
STORIES FROM LISMORE AND BEYOND
Lismore Castle Arts, Co. Waterford, Ireland
31 July – 11 October 2020
John Graham is currently exhibiting in Stories from Lismore and Beyond, at Lismore Castle Arts. The show documents an extraordinary moment in society, since the Covid-19 pandemic has spread across the globe. As people have been in lockdown for several months, our lives have seemingly transformed beyond recognition, with a shared moment for contemplation unimaginable only a few months ago.
The exhibition has 3 distinct strands – invited submissions of images of daily life, mostly submitted through social media; and include artists such as Dervla Baker, Lee Behegan, Ella Bertilsson, Stephen Brandes, Susan Buttner, Clashmore Chairs, Carol Anne Connolly, Cronan Creagh, Fanny Currey, Francis Edmund Currey, Lucien Freud, John Graham, Breda Geoghegan, Elaine Grainger, Austin Hearne, Paul Henry, Michele Horrigan, Fiona Kelly, Arno Kramer, Valerie Lee, Victoria William Ley, Heather and Ivan Morison, David Nash, Peter Nash, Dennis McNulty, Katie Nolan, Deirdre O’Mahony, Alison Pilkinton, Philip Quinn, Jim Ricks, Ciara Roche, Carolyn Sergeant, Angie Shanahan, Superfolk, Emma Tenant, Aram Wahhoud, Louise Wallace – and many more