Launch of Daithi O hAodha’s Art Exhibition, Bishopstown Library, 11 December 2010

On Saturday afternoon in Bishopstown Library, I had the honour of launching the artwork of a former teacher of mine, Daithi O’hAodha from Colaiste Chriost Ri.

Daithi O hAodha & Kieran McCarthy at the launch of Daithi's art exhibition at Bishopstown Library, 11 December 2010

Kieran’s speech:

Daithi, Ladies and Gentlemen. Many thanks for the invitation to come and chat to you this afternoon.

 They say that art has the power to stop, impress, make one question, wonder, dream, remember, be disturbed, explore and not forget – a whole series of emotions – all of which echo throughout Daithi’s works of art.

 Walking around one can see the amount of work that has been put in the shapes, patterns and colours of the art works on display; What is very evident is the amount of planning, design work, thought, emotion and building work that has gone into these works of art.

 While these images speak volumes to the art lover, the lavish use of colour give Daithi’s work a much broader appeal. Anyone who appreciates design cannot but be drawn in – taken on a journey.

 

Journeys Through Landscape:

 Many years ago, being a Chriost Ri boy, teachers like Daithi inspired me to make my own journey into exploring Irish culture, history and landscape and for that I am forever grateful –

 I can recall vividly, Daithi’s enthusiasm, energy and passion for Irish culture and for charity work – those ideas of giving recognition to culture and to people, with all their complexities, have remained the central pillars of Daithi’s work throughout the years.

 For me Daithi’s energy opened my own imagination to the importance of being creative, to expand my ways of seeing,  my  own views of the world and in that context the rich culture inherent in our country.

 My own journey ventured towards exploring Cork City and its region’s rich historical tapestry which to me is an enormous and complex artwork,  which has its own lines, contours and outward expression, meanings and memories.

 Daithi’s art before us also create new ways of seeing, ways of making and ways of expressing ideas. Each of Daithi’s work presents a different view; each work has its own meanings and memories to him and of course one can say all of that for all those who come to view his works.  Each viewer will take something different away from their visit to view his work.

 

The Power of Landscape:

 Perhaps one of the central threads to Daithi’s work is the power of landscape  – his works on display fluctuate between views of countryside and views of people

 Those that know Daithi know well that Daithi is an explorer, physically, culturally and imaginatively. He is mesmorised by the narratives within landscapes and this draws him closer to the landscape. He is pulled into the story. Landscapes just like memories seem very attractive and powerful.

Talking to Daithi about his work, it is clear that landscapes have affected him in different ways. It has slowed him down to ponder its details. Daithi talks about colour, contours and lines of his work; the actual infrastructure of landscape. However, one perhaps can also see how he is continually learning how to see, read, understand and to appreciate the landscape.

 Daithi has a pride, passion and concerns for landscapes. The landscapes he engages with, have changed his perception, his beliefs, his worldviews and his journey through life. The idea of landscape seems to have multiple tangents in Daithi’s work.

With all of that, it’s clear that for Daithi perhaps landscape infects him with a longing for it. The sites he has selected seem to call him back calling him back like old friends calling to immerse himself in a place. He presents a multitude of views, very close-up and wide pan shots that present landscape as random and messy but beautiful.

His study of the interface of human and the landscape elements seems also enhanced by wider spatial settings. He presents views changed through weather and its changing moods. It’s like the landscape can change its humour and colour. He explores the resulting and varied colour palettes of places can create a different texture forming a new rhythm and pulse for a place’s identity.

So yep for Daithi landscape with all its strengths and weakness perhaps is a genius which he continues to chat to. It engages, inspires, pushes him on and moulds him.

  Art work, Daithi O hAodha's art exhibition at Bishopstown Library, 11 December

 

 

 Personal Memories:

 His memories of scenes also seem to have a rich texture with so much to think about. Daithi’s memories, child and adult ones, work like some kind of pulse being selected, pulled apart and transformed as he engages with a topic, a narrative, a memory. His memories light up his canvasses – every story presented is charged with that emotional sense of nostalgia –the past shaping his present thoughts, ideas and actions.

 It is said that a place owes its character not only to the experiences it affords –sights and sounds – but also to what is done there – looking, listening and moving.

 The association between places of meaningful locations and people and actions is often invisible because it is so deeply engrained. In otherwords, the familiar can be forgotten. Daithi explores the richness in the ordinary if one looks, listens and observes. For Daithi, his art expresses his feelings of confidence to record scenes, to express creativity, and to show the importance of the power of making.

 All of what I have noted are ideas. They plus many more ideas certainly haunt Daithi’s own journey in the landscape, physical and imaginative he travels through; but those ideas are not set in stone.

 But what is quite clear is that Daithi has explored, explores and will continue to explore different ways of looking at what’s in front of us.

 Perhaps for us the viewer, he presents a set of lenses or tools perhaps to decode, discover, recognise, reveal, synthesise, communicate, move forward and explore our cultural heritage, our environment, our society and the very essence of our identity.

 Art work, Daithi O hAodha's art exhibition at Bishopstown Library, 11 December 2010

 

Summary:

 Ladies and gentlemen, in this world, we need more of those traits; more confidence, strength of imagination, freedom to express oneself, determination, force of life – and we need to mass produce these qualities.

 Daithi, may you always have an open mind to ideas, people and places and that your talent will grow with each work.

 I wish you all the best of luck this week and moving forward into the future. It is my great pleasure to launch your art exhibition

 

Artwork, Daithi O hAodha's art exhibition at Bishopstown Library, 11 December 2010

Art work, Daithi O'hAodha's art exhibition at Bishopstown Library, Cork, 11 December 2010

Mahon Community Mini Bus, 11 December 2010

The Mahon Community Mini Bus was officially launched last Saturday, 11 December 2010 outside the Mahon Community Development Project.  It is funded under Rapid/ dormant accounts funding. It is a bus for groups and organisations in the Mahon area. The bus is for community activities and will be used by groups to enhance their own project work and the development of their work. More information can be got from the Mahon Community Development Project. Well done to all involved!

Mahon Community Mini Bus, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Kieran at Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Launch of Mahon Community Mini Bus, Mahon CDP, 11 December 2010

Ballinlough Christmas Soiree

Ballinlough Christmas Soiree

 

Continuing their efforts to engage and present practical ideas in getting the community together and out and about and ultimately trying to cheer people up, Ballinlough Youth Clubs are presenting a Christmas evening of entertainment. The stars include Soprano Mary Hegarty accompanied by Eleanor Malone, soryteller Diarmaid O’ Drisceoil, Ballinlough Youth Club Choir and ol’ time favourite songs played by “Memory Lane”. The venue for this Christmas cheer is Ballinlough Community Centre on 12 December at 7.00pm. Refreshments will be served. Admission €5. Tickets are available from: O’ Driscolls Superstore, Ballinlough Credit Union, Patsy’s Hair Salon, Canon Horgan Youth Centre (Friday nights 6.15-7.15pm). For further information contact Lisa on 085 7178439 or email them at ballinloughyouthclubs@gmail.com. Visit them on facebook @ Ballinlough Youth Club Events. 

 

South east Cork City in the year 1655 AD!

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 9 December 2010

569a. Map of Fair Grounds, Irish Industrial and Agricultural Fair, Cork, 1932

 

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town,

Cork Independent,  9 December 2010

In the Footsteps of St. Finbarre (Part 240)

A Sense of Free State Ireland

 

If anything the Irish Agricultural and Industrial Fair on the Straight Road, Cork in 1932 was an enormous concerted effort by the Cork business class to do something positive in light of a worldwide depression – to promote Cork, the idea of an Irish product and to promote what Ireland had to offer. A walk through the various exhibit halls using the Fair catalogue, a copy of which survives in the Cork Museum, is a worthwhile exercise to get a sense of what the visitor was shown. Extra information below on each industry is provided from the multiple books on industrial development in Cork that exist also in Cork City Library.

 

In the second main exhibit area known as the Industrial Hall, the first stand the audience met was that of the Irish Tourist Association. This body was established in 1925 to market the young Irish Free State as a tourist destination internationally. It also aimed to organise the hotel and transport industry and to standardise and regulate charges. The head office was on O’Connell Street in Dublin with their Cork Office at New York House at 12 Patrick Street. They also had a London office in Piccadilly. Their exhibit at the Cork fair showed all the publications of the Association and their photographic displays.

 

Little seems to be publicly recorded of the impact of the Irish Tourist Association.  In the early 1940s, the Association carried out an impressive topographical and general survey on a parish by parish basis within each county. In an effort to gather information to promote Irish tourism post World War II, surveyors were appointed and information was gathered by visits to each parish. Photographs were taken of numerous sites and the filling in of forms/ fieldnote sheets were pursued. Five different forms were issued to the surveyors. Not all were relevant to each parish. Forms covered natural features, sports and games, holiday seaside resort amenities and general information, town or village amenities and general information and town or village accommodation and catering. A copy of the County Cork survey is in the Cork County Library. In 1939, Bord Cuartaoíchta na hEireann was established by an Act of Dáil Éireann. This organisation took over from the Irish Tourist Association eventually with statutory powers to register and grade hotels. The Bord was the forerunner of Bord Fáilte. In 1955 Bord Fáilte Éireann was created under the Tourist Traffic Act, to develop and promote tourism in the Republic of Ireland.

 

Stands number three to five in the Industrial Hall was held by the Great Southern Railways Company. They had a general display of models of transportation routes and tourist information. Provision for the creation of the company was made by the Railways Act 1924, which mandated the amalgamation of four major railway companies and the absorption of 22 smaller railway companies, all which were within the Irish Free State. From 1929, the Great Southern Railways Company also ran bus services when it acquired a stake in the Irish Omnibus Company. Under the Transport Act 1944, Córas Iompair Éireann was formed as a private company and incorporated the Great Southern Railways Company and Dublin United Transport Company.

 

Cork Harbour Commissioners presented a contour map of the port of Cork showing Cork Harbour and the River Lee from Power Head to St. Patrick’s Bridge to the scale of one foot to one mile. The map was designed and completed by John Power, Second Master of the Cork School of Art. In 1930 the Port extended its services from the City to Tivoli, which was a milestone development. The Cork School of Art exhibited a relief map of the City of Cork showing all heights and streets correct to scale. The model was executed by Mr. C. Huston, a modelling master in the School of Art, Cork at the request of the Executive Fair Committee.

 

Stands number 14-20 was a health section that was organised by Dr. John C. Saunders, the Medical Officer of Health for Cork in association with the Central Council for Health Education, London. The provision of health services in the early years of the Irish Free State was primarily provided by city and county hospitals. In the early 1930s, there were also some developments aimed at improving general public health such as the provision of free milk to children and pregnant women. In Cork, a tuberculosis clinic was held at 18, Parnell Place whilst a child welfare service was provided at Tuckey Street. The School Medical Service had routine inspections of all school children in the city. The bringing in by Dr. Saunders of the following Health Associations from London was probably strategic and important to draw focus on what he thought should be provided or improved in the then national health system. Present at the Cork fair were the Health & Cleanliness Council, London, Institute of Hygiene, London, National Milk Recovery Publicity, Dental Board of United Kingdom, National Council for Maternity and Child Welfare, Fruit Trades Federation, Model Abattoir Society and General Council for Health Education. In the broader scheme of government history, it was only in 1947 that the Department of Health was established.

 

To be continued…

 

Captions:

569a. Map of Fair Grounds, Straight Road, 1932, now occupied more or less by the playing pitches opposite the Lee Fields walk (sketches: Cork Museum)

569b. Sketch of Halls of Industry & Commerce

 

569b. Halls of Industry and Commerce, Irish Industrial and Agricultural Fair, Cork, 1932

Kieran’s Comments, On Cork City’s Tourism Strategies, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

Kieran’s Comments to the Chamber, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

On Cork City’s tourism strategies:

“I would like to thank Hilary Creedon and her team at Fáilte Ireland on the Grand Parade for the development of the I-walk packages listed in the report. I was there at the launch in August and it’s great to see such initiatives being developed. I know as well she is open to other trails being produced and because the technology is now in place, more thematic trails for Iphone products will be developed.

 

However despite the fact that we invest the bones of E.650,000  in tourism promotion, I still think we are underselling ourselves. What is becoming more apparent on the ground is that the few individuals running the tourism side in Cork are just about coping with administrative duties and a few projects that seem not to have the enormous impact they should have. Then we have various festival groups who don’t seem to have access in promoting themselves on a regional and national level. There seems to be an enormous need to strengthen the number of people creating joined up tourism strategies for the city.

 

I’m not overly happy with how we harnessed the Lonely Planet accolade this year. I would like to know early next year, what effect it did have on our city’s economy. I’m still not happy with the gateway points in the city – and how they don’t give information on the city. At the airport at a number of times during the summer, I noticed the cellotaped Lonely Planet Accolade sign in the baggage reclaim hall, which is now taken down. We create and invest in 100 days of festivals in the city per annum and that’s the best we can muster in our airport is a cellotaped banner on a pillar.We are underselling ourselves.”

                                                                                                                        

I see that Belfast the third city in Ireland has stepped up its game and has put posters up on some of the city’s hoardings. I hope for the sake of our tourism market that we have posters up in their city. Great to see how Belfast people are competitive in their tourism market – great to see their ambition and determination to not only get people there but to channel them through their shopping and cultural districts. If we are the second city and they are the third, what is our response going to be or maybe Cork is interested in being the third city?”

 

Grand Parade, Cork, December 2010

Kieran’s Comments, On Dereliction in Blackpool, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

Kieran’s Comments to the Chamber, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

On dereliction in Blackpool:

“This dereliction report on Blackpool shows 50 sites that have been identified as derelict and unsightly. It’s an absolute disgrace that some 50 owners have left their buildings in such a state. I have no problem with someone who genuinely can’t develop their premises for financial reasons and who board up their building accordingly. But I have a huge problem with landowners with no sense of civic responsibility and who create rotting concrete wildernesses. Shame on them for bringing the great name of Blackpool down.”

 

Blackpool, Cork on google

Blackpool Dereliction, 2010

Blackpool Dereliction, 2010

Blackpool Dereliction, 2010

Kieran’s Comments, On the Beamish and Crawford Site, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

Kieran’s Comments to the Chamber, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010, On the Beamish and Crawford site:

“We have a beautiful heritage stock. Here is a building, which was one of the engines of export trade at one time Cork, in western Europe. This building was one of the drivers in Ireland’s economy – a place of business, enterprise and creativity. There is a general feeling that in our time we are finding it difficult to harness those energies its memory, history, its cultural value, its very identity. I’m disappointed. As a city we seem to not to be able creative enough to bring 1,000s of tourists to this amazing historic quarter, who would all could add and stimulate the local economy. I am continuing my call for the protection and enhancement of this cultural heritage quarter. I am asking the planning department to continue to work closely with the owners of this site.”

 Beamish and Crawford site. Cork, December 2010

 

Kieran’s Comments, On the Cork Economic Monitor, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

Kieran’s Comments to the Chamber, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

On the quarterly Cork Economic Monitor:

“27,000 unemployed, over 120 vacant premises in the city centre, a decrease in tourism – there seems to no sign of any revised regional plan or emergency plan to deal with the crisis. We need to respond to the crisis. There is a need to reassess our way forward. There is a need for new ideas to come forward. The City needs to be more pro-active than ever before in terms of its regional development. We need to step up our attack on encouraging enterprise and encouraging ideas to bring the city forward economically and socially.”

Nano Nagle Bridge over River Lee, Cork, December 2010

Kieran’s Comments, On homelessness, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

Kieran’s Comments to the Chamber, Cork City Council Meeting, 6 December 2010

On homelessness:

“I’m worried by the growing young men who are homeless on our streets. The City Council invests large sums of money to organisations who provide beds for people who find themselves homeless. I would like to say to these young people, avail of these beds especially on these freezing nights.”

Ballinlough Christmas Soiree, 12 December 2010

Ballinlough Christmas Soiree

 

Continuing their efforts to engage and present practical ideas in getting the community together and out and about and ultimately trying to cheer people up, Ballinlough Youth Clubs are presenting a Christmas evening of entertainment. The stars include Soprano Mary Hegarty accompanied by Eleanor Malone, soryteller Diarmaid O’ Drisceoil, Ballinlough Youth Club Choir and ol’ time favourite songs played by “Memory Lane”. The venue for this Christmas cheer is Ballinlough Community Centre on 12 December at 7.00pm. Refreshments will be served. Admission €5. Tickets are available from: O’ Driscolls Superstore, Ballinlough Credit Union, Patsy’s Hair Salon, Canon Horgan Youth Centre (Friday nights 6.15-7.15pm). For further information contact Lisa on 085 7178439 or email them at ballinloughyouthclubs@gmail.com. Visit them on facebook @ Ballinlough Youth Club Events.