Irish Modernisms

29 May 21—25 Sep 21
Grace McMurray 'Nest' (2018) Headboard Satin Ribbon weave Polycotton 92 x 92cm 2500pix
Artists
Phillip McCrilly, James Ashe, Rachael Campbell-Palmer, Grace McMurray, Ben Weir
Info

The Centre for Contemporary Art Derry~Londonderry is pleased to reopen its doors with a new exhibition, Irish Modernisms: legacies of modernism in the North, launching on Friday 28 May 2021 from 7pm–9pm.

From architecture and infrastructure to everyday domestic design, the works in the exhibition include print, sculpture, textile, and architecture, highlighting the complex and nuanced influence of modernism in the North of Ireland. The exhibition is co-curated by Catherine Hemelryk and Matt Retallick. This exhibition is open to the general public Tues–Sat, noon–6pm. We are hosting bubble bookings on Thursday mornings for a maximum of six people from up to two households; book here.

James Ashe’s work often responds to architecture and the built environment, and for this exhibition he presents a series of newly commissioned print editions of Modernist buildings across NI from Craigavon, Banbridge, Sion Mills and Derry~Londonderry. Rachael Campbell-Palmer's work addresses seriality and architecture with two bodies of work using concrete features in the exhibition. Seriality is also a feature of Grace McMurray's hand-woven ribbon works, using geometry and patterns of Modernist art and design that also questions gendered labour and its value.

Ben Weir has created a site-specific sculptural installation to transform CCA's gallery into an abstracted domestic environment. Using modular concrete blocks the hearth and countertop host domestic objects selected by Phillip McCrilly. Phillip's research is present through the ornaments, trinkets, demijohns of Gorse Wine, foraged wildflowers and a remaking of a rejected illuminated sign amongst other items.

To coincide with the new exhibition Irish Modernisms: legacies of modernism in the North, the CCA Derry-Londonderry invites you to a series of mid-week talks and discussions which examine the legacy of modernism. Starting with the island of Ireland, the geographical reach will expand over the weeks to explore global contexts. Click here to book tickets on the British Art Network’s Eventbrite page.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS

James Ashe’s work often responds to architecture and the built environment, and for this exhibition he presents a series of print editions. Design, illustration, and typography are brought together to showcase a series of modernist buildings in Northern Ireland, some familiar, some more obscure. Included are the imposing St Theresa’s Church at Sion Mills, and the unassuming Abercorn Service Station here in Derry/Londonderry. James is currently featured in the exhibition Collecting the Past/Making the Future: Marking Centenaries 2021 at Ulster Museum, and his other exhibitions and projects include Belfast Built Heritage at Framewerk, Belfast (2020), and Signboard at The Black Box, Belfast (2020). The prints are available as limited editions, available exclusively at the gallery, and all proceeds help fund our programme.

Rachael Campbell-Palmer’s work addresses seriality and architecture. She works with concrete, plaster, and resin, materials that through their production and exhibition are situated between the industrial and the hand-crafted. In the exhibition she presents two bodies of work which demonstrate an interest in the slippages of material surface. Whether that is concrete quietly taken over by nature, or the dominant high polished finishes seen in our cityscapes. Her exhibitions include TULCA 2016: The Headless City, Galway, Methods for Egress at QSS Gallery, Belfast (2016), Periodical Review #5 at NCAD Gallery, Dublin (2015), and TERRA FIRMA at PS Squared, Belfast (2014).

Phillip McCrilly is interested in the tentative adoption of Irish modernism and considers how this has affected his own life. For example, as the fireplace, or hearth was modernised in the Irish home, the ornaments displayed on its mantel often remained the same. From bottles of holy water, beer mats or treasured trinkets such as autographs, Phillip has selected several objects that demonstrate this tension, and these are displayed on a sculpture by Ben Weir. Phillips interest in the blurring lines between public and personal extend to other artworks on display. This includes an imagined sign for the Carpenter Club, a queer social space in Belfast. Refused illumination, it is inspired by a rejected sign for Hobsons of Moy that was deemed too modern, and therefore never realised. This is accompanied by a wall painting depicting the signature of St Eligius, Patron Saint of Electricians. There are also two demijohns of Gorse Wine, left to ferment throughout the exhibition duration. Made using wildflowers foraged from Shaws Bridge, an area of Belfast saved through modernist city planning in the 1960s and known as a cruising hotspot. Phillip is a member of FRUIT SHOP, a Belfast based arts collective, and his exhibitions and projects include, Sauerkraut Jetty at CCA Derry-Londonderry (2018), and Dance Food at Project Arts Centre, Dublin (2017).

Grace McMurray takes inspiration from the geometry and patterns of modernist art and design. The construction of her artworks appears mechanical, but on closer inspection, the intricate geometry reveals the traces of the human hand. Grace is interested in order and control, questioning gendered labour and its value. Her work refers to Irish textile traditions and takes inspiration from the architectural structures and patterns that surround her. Newly conceived and existing works are installed in such a way that the intricate processes of making are revealed. Grace is a member of the 2021 Turner Prize nominated Array Collective, Belfast, and her exhibitions include Expanded Studio Project at Primary, Nottingham (2016), and Woven Polyhedra at University of Ulster, Belfast (2018).

Ben Weir presents a new sculptural intervention which seeks to transform Gallery 1 into an abstracted domestic environment. The modular construction formed from concrete blocks offers the dimensions of a hearth and a countertop and will host domestic objects selected by Phillip McCrilly. Ben is Research Associate at CCA Derry-Londonderry, and his exhibitions include Casa Vilaró: A Caress and a Blow at Barcelona Pavilion, Barcelona (2020), Artists in Architecture: Re-Activating Modern European Heritage at BOZAR, Brussels (2019), and Imagine! Belfast Festival of Politics and Ideas, Belfast (2018).

Image: Grace McMurray, Nest (2018) headboard, satin ribbon weave, polycotton. Courtesy the artist.

Download the Irish Modernisms exhibition guide here.

A sensory map is available to view here.

The co-curators of Irish Modernisms have compiled a reading and watch list to accompany the exhibition. This list will be growing throughout the exhibition. If you have a title you would like to recommend for the list you can contact us at info@ccadld.org.

Download the reading and watch list here.

CCA Derry~Londonderry held a series of online seminars to accompany the exhibition Irish Modernisms. The exhibition and seminar series have been co-curated by Catherine Hemelryk (CCA Derry~Londonderry) and Matthew Retallick (Manchester School of Art). Starting with the island of Ireland, the geographical reach expanded over the weeks to explore global contexts and a publication will be available later in the year through the CCA Shop.

This seminar series has been made possible through a bursary award from the British Art Network.

SEMINAR ARCHIVE

• Wednesday 23 June 2021, 1pm–2:30pm, Seminar 1: IRELAND

Anna Liesching (curator of art at the Ulster Museum, National Museums Northern Ireland) discuss Irish painter Mainie Jellett (1897–1944) and Fionna Barber (Reader in Art History at the Manchester School of Art and Research Degrees Co-ordinator for Art/Visual Culture) shares research on NI sculptor Deborah Brown to look at their legacies within Irish Modernism.

Download the guide: Seminar 1: IRELAND


• Wednesday 14 July 2021, 1pm–2:30pm, Seminar 2: ARTISTS

A discussion with the exhibiting artists (James Ashe, Rachel Campbell-Palmer, Phillip McCrilly, Grace McMurray, and Ben Weir) of the CCA Derry-Londonderry show Irish Modernisms.

Download the guide: Seminar 2: Artists


• Wednesday 4 August, 1pm–2:30pm, Seminar 3: LATIN AMERICA

Dr Harper Montgomery and Jorge González explore Latin American Modernisms, with a focus on craft, colonialism, and how legacies of modernism inform contemporary artistic practice. Harper Montgomery is Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Latin American Art at Hunter College, City University of New York, and Jorge González is an artist based in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Download the guide: Seminar 3: Global Contexts | Latin America

• Wednesday 18 August, 1pm–2:30pm, Seminar 4: POST-SOVIET BALTIC

The next in the Global Contexts series of seminars explores modernism in the Soviet context and also the local national Estonian context with speakers Andres Kurg and Mari Laanemets, Senior Researchers at the Institute of Art History, Estonian Academy of Arts in Tallinn. Andres Kurg's research explores the architecture and design of the Soviet Union in the late 1960s and 1970s. Andres will talk about the Pärnu KEK collective farm housing and office complex built in the 1970s. Mari Laanemets talks about the artist and designer Sirje Runge who worked in the 1970s and 1980s in Estonia.

Download the guide: Seminar 4: Global Contexts | Post-Soviet Baltic

• Wednesday 1 September, 1pm–2:30pm, Seminar 5: EAST AFRICA

Prof. Edward Denison and Dawit L. Petros feature in the last of the series of lunchtime talks. The speakers explore the distinct and often radical modernisms of Eritrea, examining the relationship between African histories and European modernism. Edward Denison is Professor of Architecture and the Other at The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London. Dawit L. Petros is a visual artist born in Eritrea and based in Chicago and Montreal.

Download the guide: Seminar 5: Global Contexts | East Africa Eritrea

Check back soon for video archives.

You can now listen to the Irish Modernisms artists and curators in a Round Table Podcast and a Bonus Material podcast:

You can download the podcasts at:

Spotify
iTunes

Google
Anchor

Or stream from our YouTube channel below:

'Irish Modernisms' storage space shot of 'The Liberty Lad' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Inner Eye' (2020) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Inner Eye' (2020) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Nest' (2018) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Nest' (2018) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Nest (2018) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Isometric Graphite Weave' (2020) and 'Portal' (2021) by Grace McMurray and 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Isometric Graphite Weave' (2020) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Portal' (2021) and 'Nest (2018) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Portal' (2021) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Portal' (2021) and 'Nest (2018) by Grace McMurray
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 3 shot of 'Portal' (2021) by Grace McMurray and 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) and 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
Irish Modernisms
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer, and 'Down Shoes, Banbridge, Abercorn Service Station, Derry~Londonderry Marlborough House, Craigavon, St. Theresa’s Church, Sion Mills' (2021) by James Ashe
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Massives' (2021) and 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer, and 'Down Shoes, Banbridge, Abercorn Service Station, Derry~Londonderry Marlborough House, Craigavon, St. Theresa’s Church, Sion Mills' (2021) by James Ashe
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) and 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer, and 'Down Shoes, Banbridge, Abercorn Service Station, Derry~Londonderry Marlborough House, Craigavon, St. Theresa’s Church, Sion Mills' (2021) by James Ashe
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Massives' by Rachael Campbell-Palmer (2021)
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer, and 'Down Shoes, Banbridge, Abercorn Service Station, Derry~Londonderry Marlborough House, Craigavon, St. Theresa’s Church, Sion Mills' (2021) by James Ashe
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) and 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 2 shot of 'Terra Firma' (2014–2021) and 'Massives' (2021) by Rachael Campbell-Palmer
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' and 'When I put my finger to the hole, they’ve cut for a dimmer switch in a wall of plaster stiffened with horsehair, it seems I’ve scratched a two hundred year-old itch' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'When I put my finger to the hole, they’ve cut for a dimmer switch in a wall of plaster stiffened with horsehair, it seems I’ve scratched a two hundred year-old itch' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'When I put my finger to the hole, they’ve cut for a dimmer switch in a wall of plaster stiffened with horsehair, it seems I’ve scratched a two hundred year-old itch' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'When I put my finger to the hole, they’ve cut for a dimmer switch in a wall of plaster stiffened with horsehair, it seems I’ve scratched a two hundred year-old itch' and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
'Irish Modernisms' Gallery 1 shot of 'Modern Convenience' (2021) by Ben Weir and 'Death of the Banshee' (2021) by Phillip McCrilly
Irish Modernisms