Thursday, 14 April 2011

Creative writing for designers

What do you get when you mix creative writing skills, Dylan Thomas and an, (after hours), empty building that houses an eclectic mix of designers?

Eleanor Flegg, who is a journalist and an editor of the Irish Arts Review, has been giving monthly creative writing classes to some of the designers in The Design Tower. The idea of the class is to improve our ability to write well about craft and design. Each month there is a reading of a craft essay from published work, which is then discussed by the group. Future topics include press releases and artist statements. The class have greatly enjoyed Eleanor's course and found it to be really beneficial.

Goldsmith Se O'Donoghue from Da Capo jewellers shares the following piece which he wrote during the class. It is inspired by the docklands area and the building in which he works.

Under Craft Wood
(The Design Tower after Dylan Thomas)

FIRST VOICE (_Very softly_)

To begin at the beginning:

It is spring, moonless night in the small city, starless
and bible-black, the cobblestreets silent and the hunched,
graffitti'd-and-NAMA'd docks limping invisible down to the
sloeblack, slow, black, crowblack, fishingboatbobbing sea.
And all the people of the lulled and dumbfound town are
sleeping now.

Hush, the babies are sleeping, the weavers, the cobblers,
the silversmiths and knitters, seamstress, woodturner,
potter and cooper, the blacksmith and the quilter,
milliner, dressmaker, lacemaker, writer, the callous thumb'd
embroiderer and the tidy goldsmith.

You can hear the dew falling, and the hushed town breathing.
Only _your_ eyes are unclosed to see the black and folded
docklands fast, and slow, asleep.

Listen. It is night moving in the streets, the processional
cold-plunged tempered wind in South Lotts and Misery Hill,
it is the water lapping in the Canal Basin, and
the falling sleep of staggered red poles in Grand Canal Square.

Listen. It is night in the chill, squat Tower, humming with
backstitch and bodkin and bejewelled black, precious bullion and
beautiful brooch; night in the boardroom, quiet as a mouse;
in Seamus Gill's with silver shining black in the dark;
in Roisin Gartlands's with rosy soft leathers,
in Mick DeHoog's with a pause between notes,
and Alan Ardiff's with wit stood on plinths.
It is to-night on Gallery Quay, trotting silent,
With snipped threads on its heels,
along the cockled cobbles, past darkened doors,
text and trinket, violin, headress, watercolours
done by hand, china ladies and bronze bust.

Time passes. Listen. Time passes.

Come closer now.

Only you can hear the workshops sleeping in the Tower in the
slow deep glazed and silent black, annealed night. Only you
can see, in the locked studios, the shopcoats and aprons
over the chairs, the singers and mannequins, the hedgehog pincushions,
inspiration pasted on the wall, and the yellowing fishing-bait
pictures of work-past. Only you can hear and see, behind the
eyes of the sleeping studios, the movements and journeys and puzzles
and colours and dismays and visions and tunes and hopes
and prayers and fall and despairs and big seas of their dreams.

From where you are, you can hear their dreams.

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Ayelet Lalor feature

Great Irish Design to celebrate the Year of Craft

The Crafts Council of Ireland and Craft Northern Ireland have designated 2011 as Year of Craft. The year marks the 40th anniversary of the Crafts Council of Ireland and will be celebrated through a diverse range of dynamic events and programmes to showcase the very best of craft made on the island of Ireland.

The Interiors Directory is Ireland’s premier online destination for resourcing all aspects of interiors projects. They are proud to support Crafts Council of Ireland members and are excited to showcase selected designers who produce furniture, stained glass and sculpture. Their featured companies represent the brightest and most talented in the interiors industry. Ayelet Lalor is one of their featured ceramic sculptors.
Ayelet Lalor is an Irish ceramic artist and sculptor specialising in figurative work. Her contemporary ceramics range from wallpieces and figurines to life-size garden sculpture, including commissions, both private and corporate for awards, hotels, schools and specific locations. Humour, colour and movement are predominant in her ceramic work, while her figurative bronze sculptures resonate with a different quality, more quiet and serene than their colourful ceramic counterparts. As a figurative sculpture artist the exploration of the female figure has been at the core of Ayelet's work for many years. Working in clay, bronze and new media she consistently finds new ways to renew her interest in the human figure.
You can see more of Ayelet's work on her website or find out more about the Year of Craft 2011.

Tuesday, 1 February 2011

"And so it goes"

Graphic Studio Gallery, Dublin, presents "And so it goes."

New works by Philip Murphy

To be opened by Colm O'Gorman,
Founder of One in Four
Executive Director Amnesty International Ireland

Exhibition runs from 3 - 26 February 2011.

And so it goes features new works by Philip Murphy. This show incorporates innovative printmaking techniques where Murphy uses plates made from silicone or perspex and methods such as encaustic. Encaustic is a highly pigmented wax, which is painted onto a heated plate from which a monotype can be pulled. More traditional printmaking techniques are also exhibited albeit incorporating sculpture and installation.

For more information on the exhibition visit the Graphic Studio website.

Saturday, 29 January 2011

Mick the Miller unveiled


Elizabeth O'Kane's life size bronze sculpture of Irish greyhound racing legend, Mick the Miller, was unveiled by An Taoiseach, Mr. Brian Cowan, on 29 January 2011 in Killeigh village green, County Offaly, where the dog was born in the 1920s.
"I thoroughly enjoyed this commission, not only because I am a dog lover but also because my father owned a champion greyhound when he was a young boy, Priceless Border, winner of the English Derby in 1948.
I spent a lot of time at Shelbourne Park Greyhound Stadium and I had a real greyhound model for me in my studio."

Thursday, 16 December 2010

Plane Tree Sculpture


In December 2010 sculptor Elizabeth O'Kane's latest outdoor work, Plane Tree, was installed in the courtyard of The Incorporated Orthopaedic Hospital of Ireland, in Clontarf, Dublin. It is made of bronze and is her largest sculpture to date measuring three meters tall.

The hospital committee came up with the brief to make a Plane tree; their inspiration was that Hippocrates (460 B.C. - 366 B.C.) taught his pupils the art of medicine under a plane tree on the Island of Kos.  Six artists were invited to tender, with Elizabeth winning the competition.  It is more abstract in style than her usual work.

See more of Elizabeth's work on her website.

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Christmas Studio open day

Christmas Studio open day and sale of work at The Design Tower on 10th and 11th Dec 2010
Ayelet Lalor , Breda Haugh, Da Capo and Amethyst Design and possibly more ( to be confirmed)

When:  12-8 Fri - 10th December
            10-6 Sat - 11th December

Monday, 1 November 2010

Design Week trail 2010

designtrail_webb.jpg

As part of the nationwide series of events that make up part of Design Week 2010 we are delighted to open our studio to the public.
Featuring the Gemstone Barbeque.

WHEN:
Monday 1st to Saturday 6th November


WHERE:
Design Tower

MORE INFO:
www.designweek.ie