The exhibition aims to create an awareness of the meaning of home in contemporary Ireland. Through listening to the experiences of the women, the research team realised the importance of involving people who were experiencing or had experienced homelessness, in the development of services for people out-of-home. With: Tim Mara, Paddy Jolley, Beat Klein, Hendrijke Kuhne, Phil Collins...
exhibition on the theme of home at IMMA
An exhibition based on a collaborative project between the Irish Museum
of Modern Art and Focus Ireland opens to the public at IMMA on Thursday
2 November 2006. Entitled Hearth: Concepts of Home from the IMMA
Collection in collaboration with Focus Ireland, it is being shown to
mark the 21st anniversary of Focus Ireland, a national voluntary
organisation working to prevent, alleviate and eliminate homelessness.
The exhibition aims to create an awareness of the meaning of home in
contemporary Ireland. It has emerged as a result of an access programme
run by IMMA's Education and Community and Collection Departments.
Focus Ireland was founded in 1985 by Sr Stanislaus Kennedy in response
to research into the needs of homeless women in Dublin. Through
listening to the experiences of the women, the research team realised
the importance of involving people who were experiencing or had
experienced homelessness, in the development of services for people
out-of-home. Initially, Focus Ireland provided street services to young
people, advice, advocacy, information, help with finding a home and a
place to meet and have a meal. Since then, Focus Ireland has continued
to expand its services opening low rent, quality housing developments
and service projects in Dublin as well as housing developments in both
Limerick and Waterford.
Comprising 16 works, Hearth represents a variety of works ranging from
Power Cuts Imminent by Tim Mara, in which the artist depicts the normal
scenario of a family home in the 1980s but disrupts the scene to include
an insert of his time at art-college, to Hereafter a recent work by
Paddy Jolley created when, in 2002, Jolley was commissioned to make a
film in Ballymun, Dublin, - an area targeted for radical social and
economic change. As part of this plan, residents were requested to move
from flats in tower blocks, which in many cases were their lifetime
dwellings, to new contemporary houses. Jolley focused on the newly
vacated flats - and the physical items left behind.
Other works include Property by Beat Klein and Hendrijke Kuhne, a
response to the property boom in Ireland in the late 1990s. Cut from
estate agents advertisements in The Irish Times over a period of months
in 1998, at the height of the property boom in Dublin, these flimsy
houses of card illustrate the fragility of those dreams of wealth, while
How to make a refugee by Phil Collins' is the story of a family caught
up in a very different reality, the dispossessed who are forced to find
new homes and a sense of identity as a result of war.
Commenting on the exhibition Helen O'Donoghue, Senior Curator: Education
and Community Programmes, IMMA said, "The collaborative process of
working between IMMA and Focus Ireland aims to engage people with
contemporary art and artists. Through sharing and exchanging skills and
knowledge of the curatorial process it aims to demystify and reveal the
often hidden process of exhibition planning and realisation, opening out
the meaning of public access into the resources of a museum in general
and IMMA in particular".
Declan Jones, Chief Executive of Focus Ireland said, "Focus Ireland's
vision is that 'everyone has a right to a place they can call home'.
Hearth provides a unique opportunity to explore this vision and to
reflect on what home means in contemporary Ireland. The historical
experience of Ireland as a place of mass emigration and our more recent
experience as a country of migration means many of our community have an
acute understanding of home as more than a place of shelter, but as a
sense of belonging, of knowing and being known, of connecting - and not
just belonging to a homestead but to a wider place, a community, a
culture. We hope that through this exhibition the need and concept of
home are presented to the public in an innovative and unique way that
will contribute to the awareness and advocacy objectives of Focus
Ireland."
The works included in the exhibition have been selected by a process of
consultation between Helen O'Donoghue, Senior Curator: Education and
Community Programmes, IMMA, Catherine Marshall, Senior Curator: Head of
Collections, IMMA and the customers and staff of Focus Ireland.
A catalogue, sponsored by Red Dog Design Consultants, accompanies the
exhibition.
Hearth continues until 1 April 2007.
For further information and images please contact Monica Cullinane or
Patrice Molloy at Tel: +353 1 612 9900; Email: press@imma.ie
Opening: Thursday 2 November 2006
Irish Museum of Modern Art
Royal Hospital Military Road Kilmainham 8 - Dublin
Opening hours: Tuesday to Saturday 10.00am - 5.30pm (except Wednesday 10.30am - 5.30pm)
Sundays and Bank Holidays 12 noon - 5.30pm Closed Mondays and 24 - 26 December