Catalyst Arts Annual Student Show

Catalyst Arts Annual Student Show

16 December 2010 19:00 – 06 January

We are delighted to announce the opening of

Catalyst Arts Annual Student Show.

The first group exhibition in our new gallery space showcases a range of work from some of the most interesting artists currently in / recently finished education. The exhibition opens on Thursday 16th December 2010, 7 – 9pm and continues until 6th January 2011.

The show will close with a performance by artist Anthony Keigher, Anthony is looking for six participants to be involved in the work which will take the form of a 3 course dinner. If you would like to participate please RSVP to studentshowcatalyst@gmail.com.

Participating artists; Phillip Liam McCrilly and Cecile Le Couedic, Christopher Burns, Ciaran Hussey, Anthony Keigher, Alissa Kleist, Laura O’Connor, Sean Redahan, Karolin Reichardt, Nadine Stewart, Anne Marie Taggart, James Ward.
Alongside the exhibition will also be a Critical text by Sarah Lundy.

Switched

switch poster

Switched

Date: 2 September 2010

Adrian Duncan & Fiona Marron

Of Process

Both artists’ current work takes, as its shared root, physical, speculative and necessary human activities, which are used as tools for investigating other, less tactile, human activities and processes. These physical activities reveal a process that is used to view the less tactile processes from a different angle. Duncan and Marron share an interest in addressing the complications inherent in attempting to define such an abstract topic. In the manifestation of these ideas, metaphors are introduced that provoke thought and enquiry into our claims to knowledge.
Duncan’s work overlays everyday empirical investigative activities upon less obvious processes of measurement. His work at first illustrates the flaws in this scientific method (the problem with induction, statics, etc.), particularly when applied to dynamic systems. The work attempts to marry one method of measurement with another seemingly incomapatible system, and from this, investigating how institutional structures are formed and changed. This is done with reference to Popper’s Objective Knowledge.
In her sculpture and video installation Marron pursues her interests in the relationships between labour, knowledge and value, using the mining industry as a model. Combining appropriated text from sociologist Alvin Gouldner’s 1954 field report of an American gypsum plant and footage from the realms of production at a present-day Irish mine, Marron examines the ‘many standpoints in terms of which the raw data of factory life can be ordered and made meaningful.’ (Gouldner 1954)
Adrian Duncan studied and worked as a structural engineer in the UK and Ireland for over a decade before returning to study fine art at IADT. His practice is based in sculpture/installation, video, writing and drawing. He has exhibited at Pallas Contemporary Projects, The Joinery and The Lewis Glucksman, UCC. He is assistant editor of Paper Visual Art to which he also contributes. Fiona Marron was born in Co. Monaghan in 1987 and graduated from Fine Art at Dublin Institute of Technology last year. She has had solo exhibitions at The Joinery, Dublin (2010) & FOUR gallery, Dublin (2009). She has participated in many group shows including Reverse Pedagogy III, a residency and exhibition hosted by The Model, Sligo (2009).

Until the Light Takes Us


Until the Light Takes Us [2008ce]

1 August 2010 18:00 –

Vinyl Reclamation

A Lughnasa reaping for Danse Macabre

Catalyst Arts, Sunday 1st August 2010ce, 6pm

Until the Light Takes Us [2008ce]

Until The Light Takes Us tells the story of black metal. Part music scene and part cultural uprising, black metal rose to worldwide notoriety in the mid-nineties when a rash of suicides, murders, and church burnings accompanied the explosive artistic growth and output of a music scene that would forever redefine what heavy metal is and what it stands for to other musicians, artists and music fans worldwide.

Until The Light Takes Us goes behind the highly sensationalized media reports of “Satanists

running amok in Europe” to examine the complex and largely misunderstood principles and beliefs that led to this rebellion against both Christianity and modern culture.

To capture this on film, directors Aaron Aites and Audrey Ewell moved to Norway and lived with the musicians for several years, building relationships that allowed them to create a surprisingly intimate portrait of this violent, but ultimately misunderstood, movement. The result is a poignant, moving story that’s as much about the idea that reality is composed of whatever the most people believe, regardless of what’s actually true,

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Vinyl Consummation

Vinyl Consummation documents an event held on the first of May 2010ce, celebrating the sacramental dimension of the vinyl record; a ritual rendition and subsequent immolation of Buzum’s album ‘Belus’, executed high in the hills of South Armagh.

Marking Burzum’s inaugural artwork following Varg Vikernes’ emergence from the darkness of prison, Vinyl Consummation called forth Burzum’s hymn to the God of Light Belus on the feast-day of his Celtic equivalent Belenus, in the ritual landscape of Ulster’s Mythic Heart.

Vinyl Consummation brings to light folkish and pop-cultural mythologies in a contemporary rite, blending Norwegian Black Metal and Iron-Age Ulster in a rebirth of subcultural desire.

Event scored by Jordan Hutchings

An Ichor Inc. event in association with Catalyst Arts

Catalyst Arts, 5 College Court, Belfast, BT1 6BX.

T: 02890 313303  E: catalystarts@gmail.com  W: www.oldcatalystarts.hilken.co.uk

The Embassy Salon Show

The Embassy Salon Show

8 July 2010 18:00 – 16 July


Catalyst Arts Presents

The Embassy Salon Show
9th July -16th July
opening Thurs 8th July 6-8

Catalyst Arts and the Embassy Gallery (Edinburgh) have come together
to present a selection of work from the Embassy Salon Show 2010. For
one week only the Catalyst will showcases the works of emerging and
established Edinburgh artists.
Works by Morag Keil, Tayto and Tayto, Ewan Sinclair, Alexa Hare, Leigh Chorlton,
Calvin Laing, Peter Amoore, Greg Fullerton and Tiffany Parbs, Tessa Payne,
Claire Louise Davies, Alan and Rose Holligan and Marie Smith.

Gallery opening hours Tues-Sat 11-5
Catalyst Arts
5 College Court
Belfast
BT1 6BX
www.catalystart.org.uk
catalystarts@gmail.com
02890 31 33 03

Michael Fortune- We Invented Halloween

 

Michael Fortune / ‘We Invented Halloween’

4 March 2010 18:00

Thursday 4th March, 6-9pm

We invented Halloween is a five-channel installation recorded on Halloween night, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 in the artist’s family home in rural County Wexford. Each year a central activity of the night involves the artist’s mother dressing up in an improvised manner with anything that will disguise her identity, and calling to his granny’s house, which is next door. Prior to calling to the house we see his mother getting dressed, with the aid of his sisters, who dress and undress her with layers of coats, socks, tights and plastic masks.  The work, which involves long, hand-held takes, follows her along the road and into the grannies house. In both recordings she is unaware of her identity, thinking instead that she is one of her great grand children. Each of the five films finishes when his mother leaves the house, happy that she has fooled his granny once again.

Previously this work has only been presented as a three-channel work, however the artist has produced the five-channel version for the Catalyst show.