Wednesday, 20 July 2011

Project 51

Diamond ring by Precious

Eoin McDonnell is launching a new Irish Designer Collective store which will be called Project 51. Eoin's business Precious is located in The Design Tower.  There are fifteen Irish designers involved in the new concept which is devoted to providing its customers the very best from high end luxury Irish goods. The new shop will open in September at 51 South William St Dublin 2. As Eoin says -

"By purchasing in an Irish owned boutique you are contributing significantly to the Irish economy!  For every hundred Euro spent in a multinational store only fourteen goes back into the local economy versus forty five through an Irish owned shop (figures courtesy DCBA.ie)"

Jennifer Rothwell Autumn/Winter 2011

According to Jennifer Rothwell one of Ireland’s top designers involved in the store, “South William Street was always filled with the business end of the Rag Trade and now it is being reclaimed. It’s time for the rebirth of South William St once again as the Fashion Center of Dublin!”

Housed in a 19th Century Georgian building Project 51 -  Irish Design Collective – is a High End NYC Soho style luxury boutique filled with the Best of Irish fashion, jewellery, millinery, accessories and furniture. Project 51 offers the ultimate shopping experience in a relaxed friendly atmosphere. Customers can choose from an amazing selection of luxury goods, from engagement rings to bridal wear, jewellery, evening wear, tailoring, millinery and luxury leather bags.

Colette Van Vaarsveld - Table and magazine rack

Project 51 is bringing an international concept to Ireland: establishing a creative-fashion-design hub to showcase Irish design and provide the designers with the opportunity to offer unique designs to the public.


Martha Lynn hat

The designers involved also intend to make an international impact, to increase the profile of Irish design internationally with an emphasis on high quality and innovative design. Their aim is to achieve the same level of international recognition as the “Antwerp Six”, a group of influential avant garde fashion designers who graduated from Antwerp’s Royal Academy of Fine Arts between 1980-1981. The fashion collective presented a distinct, radical vision for fashion during the 1980s that established Antwerp as a notable location for fashion design.  Walter Van Beirendonck,  Ann Demeulemeester, Dries Van Noten, Dirk Van Saene, Dirk Bikkembergs and Marina Yee travelled to London and Paris together in the Eighties. Together the Antwerp six have conquered the fashion world with their very distinct vision of fashion.

Designers involved in Project 51 are -
Ana Faye – www.anafaye.com (Leather Bags)
Caiomhe Keane – www.Que-Va.com (Fashion)
Colette Van Jaarsveld – www.Arcology.ie (Interior Architect – sustainable furniture & accessories)
Claire O’Connor – lilccouture.ie (Fashion)
Eily O Connell – eilyoconnell.com (Jewellery)
Emma Taylor – www.RubyJewels.ie (Jewellery)
Eoin McDonnell – www.Precious.ie (Jewellery)
Geraldine Murphy – www.Saba.ie (Jewellery)
Heather Finn – heatherfinn.com (Fashion)
Jennifer Rothwell – jrothwell.net (Fashion)
Martha Lynn – marthalynnmillinery.com (Millinery)
Sinead Doyle – sineaddoyle.com (Fashion)
Sinead Clarke – www.EssenC.ie (Fashion)
Vikki Shorten – www.VSLJewelry.com (Jewellery)
Yvonne Ryan – www.EveElla.com (Jewellery)

Article source - from Designer Dublin

Friday, 8 July 2011

Studio Visit - Róisín Gartland

The 'Studio Visits' are a monthly blog instalment. We're opening our doors to introduce you to the artists and designers in The Design Tower! Each interview will give you an insight into the individual designer or business.

This month we're chatting to Róisín Gartland.


Can you tell us about your creative path up as far as your latest field of study?

My design practice opened in 1987 and has been located in The Design Tower since 1988. I am a leather specialist and my business concentrated on developing a low volume high quality range of products.


I created bespoke pieces for private clients from the outset, (which I continue to do) and when demand for my work grew, I developed a commercial range of clothing that sold throughout Ireland, the UK and Europe. I am commissioned regularly to make pieces for film & TV and also for special events and concerts.


While being an independent woman operating a small business in the late eighties to early nineties was challenging in itself, it did not feed my soul. I needed to find a way to express myself creatively outside the commercial world. In 1991 I began to explore fine art as a means to fulfill that purpose and discovered a perfect visual language ideally suited to my needs. Over the next decade I balanced studies in fine art with my design business and was rewarded with a BA in fine art in 2000.

The most difficult time came in the years following the BA. Attempts to stitch my two practices together were surprisingly unsuccessful. My business had become a demanding master allowing little space to grow. So in 2004 I took a leap of faith and closed the commercial side of the business. In breaking up the old framework new possibilities emerged and as a result the last seven years have been some of the most creative and rewarding of my career to date. I returned to study 2 years ago to concentrate on an MFA in sculpture at NCAD.

What inspires your design - are there people or things that particularly inspire you?
 Unité d'Habitation by Corbusier

I am continually drawn to pattern formations, be they in nature or in geometry.  In this regard I am inspired in equal measure by nature, the human body and by architecture. Paris is one of my favourite cities for creative stimulus and Italy for its abundance of beautiful materials. I also have moments in sleep where inspiration is awakened.

Tell us about the range of materials that you like to work with


The range of leathers available is enormous but over the years I have whittled the list down to Spanish lambskins, Japanese hides, Ethiopian lamb suede, and a small selection of special finished leathers. On the other side of my practice I really like working with clay and paper, both separately and together.


It would be great to hear about your master’s course - what your goals and aspirations were and whether you feel they were met.

Pattern formation on vellum

For the last 2 years I have been immersed in a research based MFA at NCAD. This space allowed me the freedom to explore new avenues and engage with new audiences. My goal was to develop the building blocks for my reconfigured practice and out of that I developed a method that enabled my research to weave in and out between internal and external enquiries so while I spent much time pondering issues in the studio an equal amount of time was spent developing work that required an audience to activate it. It was a very challenging and rewarding time that was equally balanced by holding on and letting go. I’m happy to say was it was successfully completed.


In relation to your studio, if you had a crystal ball what vision of the future would you like to see?

I would like to see my studio continually evolve allowing the unexpected to happen. I would like to continue to share my expertise and experience with the generations to come and I would like to move outside the studio on occasion to research abroad. Having just completed my first ‘Tower Summer School’ workshop I would also like to see these develop as regular events in the ‘Tower’ calendar.


Can you tell us about the piece you created for The Design Tower Bender Exhibition?

The concept was to create an image of beauty in a modern style while making reference to Benders collections of Japanese Ukiyo-e prints and antiquarian books.

The image brings together all these elements: the outfit is made entirely from Japanese materials and the collar and cuff highlight the prominent fan motif in Japanese prints. Finally the location is the Long Room Library with centuries of knowledge as the backdrop.


Thanks for telling us more about your business Róisín! For more information, visit the Róisín Gartland website.

Check out the other designer interviews in the series too!

Tuesday, 14 June 2011

Studio Visit - Seamus Gill, Silversmith and Jeweller

The 'Studio Visits' will be a monthly blog instalment. We're opening our doors to introduce you to the artists and designers in The Design Tower! Each interview will give you an insight into the individual designer or business.

This month we're chatting to Seamus Gill -  Silversmith and Jeweller

Can you tell us how long you have been here in the Design Tower and what you do?

I have had a studio in The Design Tower for nearly 20 years and I am a silversmith.

What does that entail?

As a silversmith, I normally buy silver from a bullion dealer that has been rolled out into flat sheets, similar to a flat sheet of paper, but with a thickness from 1 to 1.5mm. With a hand saw I can cut the shape I want out of the flat sheet , then I move the flat sheet of silver by hammering it into a three dimensional shape.

Is silver easy to shape?

Silver is extremely malleable and a great metal to work with. The sheet silver can be moved by stretching or compressing the metal.

Do you model it with your hands?


Oh no! It’s much too hard for that. All the stretching and compressing is done by using hammers to move the metal and a selection of anvils, which we call stakes, to support the metal.


Do you hammer the metal hot like a blacksmith?

No. Silver and non ferrous metals are generally worked cold. But you can only move the metal so far until it work hardens. I then heat it up with a gas torch until it is red hot to anneal the metal. That relives the stress in the metal and brings it back to a soft state so it can be worked further. In every piece I make it’s a continual process of working the metal then annealing and then further working.

What do you make?

I work at two scales, the small scale of jewellery and the larger scale of silversmithing work.

My jewellery is like a small version of my silversmithing work, it is all formed and shaped flat sheet. Most of my jewellery balances a highly polished section against a textured finish. In my latest collection “Flowing Curves” I have added 22 carat gold plating to the textured surface as you can see in the photograph of the bangle.


Do you like making bangles?

It’s a great scale to work in. It’s just that bit too big for someone trained in jewellery but it’s nice and small for someone trained in silversmithing.

What are you doing next in jewellery?

I’m working on developing a new collection of jewellery which I hope to have ready to launch in DesignYard this autumn.

And you work on a larger scale?

Yes, most of what I do would be on a larger scale. I make a lot of tabletop silversmithing work. That’s like candlesticks, vases, water pitchers and larger pieces like that.

Where would you show that work?

I normally make it for exhibition. I’ve just taken part in an exhibition in London where I showed a body of work in the exhibition “the Ten Masters” of British Silversmithing as the launch of British Silver Week. And I am represented by DesignYard on Nassau Street, just a few doors down from Grafton Street. I regularly have work exhibited there.


Is all your silversmithing work for galleries?


No, I do a lot of silversmithing work to commission. Throughout the history of silversmithing most work is made to commission.

What exactly is commissioning?

Basically it’s where I can design and make a piece that you can’t get anywhere else. I suppose it’s a bespoke service.

What kind of commissions are you working on now?

I am making the trophies for the Darley Irish Oaks races at the Curragh and the awards for the Rugby player and Club of the year which is presented by the Rugby writers of Ireland and on some private presentation piece.

Do you only work in silver?


Over the last number of years I have made sculptural pieces in sheet bronze. It has very similar working qualities to silver, but without the high cost of silver. I have also introduced colour to my work through patination on the bronze.

At the moment I have some pieces in the “Portfolio” exhibition in the Farmleigh Gallery in the Phoenix Park and I’m working on some pieces for the “Sculpture in Context” exhibition that will be on in the Botanic Gardens in September.



Séamus, thank you for sharing your work with us!
Next month we will be featuring another designer from The Design Tower. You can also read the other interviews in the series.

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

Rangoli featured on the 'One Fab Day' blog


Rangoli headpieces have been featured on the Irish bridal blog One Fab Day. Aisling Nelson designs bespoke bridal jewellery and hair accessories. The article features designers that create alternative headpieces for weddings. The two designs above are bespoke commissions made from fine crochet and incorporating citrine and pearl detail.

You can read the full article on the One Fab Day blog. To see more of Aisling's designs, visit the Rangoli website and blog.

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Launch of Designer Dublin

Designer Dublin is being launched tomorrow 1st June at 5pm in the Kilkenny Shop, on Nassau Street, Dublin 2.

Senator David Norris and broadcaster and stylist Sonya Lennon will be launching Designer Dublin and there will be live craft demonstrations from a number of designer-makers.

For more information on this invite-only event, contact Eibhlin Curley at Dublin City Enterprise Board.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

The Design Tower Summer School 2011

Housed in an old sugar refinery in Dublin’s' Grand Canal Basin, The Design Tower is home to a variety of award-winning designers, artists and craftspeople.

This June you will be able  to learn skills directly from the professionals, in their studios in small intimate classes. These classes are aimed at artists and those with creative backgrounds. We welcome the chance to challenge and widen students creativity- in a range of disciplines.

Classes are small so please book now to avoid disappointment. Contact details are specific to each class. Free parking is available.

Here are the details of the seven courses on offer - 

PORTRAIT SCULPTURE  WITH LIVE MODEL with sculptor Liz O’Kane.

Liz was awarded the RHA Conor/Moran Sculpture Medal in 2007 and the Oireachtas/CAST Sculpture Prize in 2000.

Collectors of her work include the International Rugby Board, the Irish Rugby Football Union, The National Concert Hall, Belfast City Hall and New York New York Hotel Casino in Las Vegas.

Public pieces include life size bronze sculpture of world famous Irish tenor, Count John McCormack, in Dublin's Iveagh Gardens, and champion Irish greyhound Mick the Miller, in Killeigh, County Offaly.

Sculptor Liz O'Kane is running a weekend course in portrait sculpture with live model in her studio. Running over two weekends, 11/12th and 18/19 June, the course will consist of 8 x three hour sessions. The course will be intensive, suitable for all levels from beginners, to those with experience. Students will have finished portrait head by end of course.

Dates - 11/12th and 18/19 June
Price - €390
Deposit 50%.
Times - 10 am to 5 pm daily
Places - Four places available
Contact - 0879174947, email: info@elizabethokane.com,

For more information, visit Liz's website.

Clay is included in course cost.  Armatures and modelling stands are provided and can be purchased at end of class at cost price of €20.

LEATHER WORKSHOP  1 - MAKE A LAP-TOP BAG  or WORKSHOP 2 - MAKE A HANDBAG  with Roisin Gartland.

Roisin Gartland is an award winning designer and conceptual artist. She works to commission, and fashions unique pieces for individuals and costume pieces for stage and film. She has just completed an MFA at the NCAD, and her work is in several collection nationally and internationally.

The aim of this initiative is to open the studio to another type of experience. Workshop participants have the opportunity to design their own unique piece and proceed to realise their creations under Róisín’s guidance. It will be a challenging 2 days so be prepared!

Choice of beautiful leathers. All equipment supplied

Dates:  25/26th June /  02/03rd July
Times: 10am to 6 pm
Price: €300 including materials per two day workshop
Deposit 50%
Places: 5 per workshop   
Contact: 087 2490984 / email - workshop@roisingartland.com
For more information visit Roisin's website.

INTRODUCTION TO JEWELLERY DESIGN AND HANDSKILLS with Da Capo Goldsmiths.

Lee Harding and Sé O'Donoghue are two goldsmiths who set up their studio in 2000 after extensive experience working in studios in Ireland and abroad. They regularly organize exhibits for the annual Design Week Festival showcasing the
best of Irish design and jewellery makers, and have been published among the best collections of international designer jewellery.

Each workshop will begin with a first day of wax carving and exploring shape and form, and preparing a wax for casting.

The second weekend, the group will have their rough-cast form in precious metal and will clean and finish the object to a finished piece of jewellery. The aim of the workshop is that each person will be guided through creating a piece of jewellery from start to finish, and will have their own piece of jewellery at the end to take with them, either a ring, a pendant or a brooch.

Dates -The workshop will be comprised of one day each weekend, ie;
Workshop 1:  Saturday 18th & Saturday 25th June
Workshop 2:  Sunday 19th & Sunday 26th June
Times - 10 to 5.
Price - €335 and covers 2 days tuition, casting, & silver material
Deposit – 50%
Places -  3 in each workshop.
Contact - letmeknow@dacapo.ie
For more information, visit the Da Capo website.

SILVERSMITHING - MAKING A BOWL with silversmith Seamus Gill.

Séamus Gill is one of Ireland’s leading silversmiths. He has been commissioned by many of Ireland's companies and has exhibited widely nationally and internationally. Most recently he exhibited as one of the “Ten Masters” of British silver.

Séamus Gill will give a weekend workshop on Silversmithing, the art of moving a flat sheet of metal into an elegant three dimensional form. On this course students will be shown how to use traditional skills to hammer a flat disc of metal into the shape of a bowl.

Techniques covered will include sinking, raising, annealing and some soldering.
Because of the high cost of silver, gilding metal will be used on this course but students are welcome to buy their own silver if they wish to make a piece in silver.

This course is suitable for those with a basic understanding of metalworking who wish to expand into the area of forming metal by using silversmithing techniques, or for those who wish to improve on their silversmithing skills.

Dates - 18 and 19 June
Time - 10am to 5pm
Price  - € 230 incl materials
Deposit 50%
Places  - 4
Contact  - 01 677 5701
For more information visit Seamus Gill's website.

MODEL AND CAST IN CIMENT FONDU with sculptor Ayelet Lalor.

Ayelet Lalor (MA in ceramics)  has built a career in ceramic sculpture over the past 13 years. She specialises in figurative sculpture and works in a range of materials including clay, bronze and concrete. She has been responsible for numerous commissions, both private and corporate, including Percent for Art. She has work in many collections including the OPW and Limerick City Gallery.

Over the two day workshop students will be brought through the process from clay model to creating a mould and finishing with a cast version of the model in ciment fondu and/or plaster.

The student will learn to create and finish a clay relief model up to an aprox size of 10 x 16”. This is the basis for the cast, and the process will continue with the creation of  a silicone rubber   and plaster mould, to finally casting their original design in ciment fondu. Once the mould has been completed it can be used for numerous castings in various materials, wax, plaster, etc. This course is most suitable for those with an artistic and /or sculptural backround.

Ayelet will also be teaching a 2 part silicon mould making course using the students existing work on the 02/03 July. Contact her for further details.

Dates:  18/19th June  / 25/26th June
Price: €230 incl materials per 2 day workshop
Deposit 50%.                                                                                                               Places: 5 per workshop
Times: 10am to 5 pm 
Contact: 087 6485856 / email   - studio@ayeletlalor.com
For more information visit Ayelet's website.                                                    


DESIGN AND JEWELLERY SKILLS with Jeweller and Designer Breda Haugh.

Breda Haugh is an award winning Jewellery designer and maker. Her work is retailed through leading retail outlets and the National Museum of Ireland. She also undertakes commissions, corporate work and undertakes exhibition work.

This workshop will show the student how to develop an idea and make a piece of Jewellery. Students will be brought through stages of research and planning involved in designing a piece of jewellery such as a ring or pendant. The resulting idea will be made into a piece of jewellery over the period of the two day workshop using basic handskills.

Drawing equipment, Tools and silver and some other materials will be provided. Each student’s particular needs and abilities will be catered to. This course is suitable for all levels, but an interest in Jewellery and some knowledge of working in metals would be an advantage.

Dates - 18 and 19 June and 25 and 26 June
Time - 10am to 5pm
Price - € 280.00 including materials- silver and drawing equipment ,
Deposit 50%
Places – 3
Contact - 01 6705738
For more information visit Breda's website.

PAPERMAKING with paper conservationist Pat McBride

Pat McBride has been working with paper for over twenty five years. Having established the Paper Conservation Studio in 1985, he has been responsible for the conservation and preservation of a huge range of paper based art from watercolours prints and drawings to a range of ephemera materials. Since its conception, the Studio has been involved with a vast range of paper making projects. Core to paper conservation is a fundamental understanding of the hand papermaking process and it is this knowledge that will be imparted to participants who undertake this course.

This two day workshop will introduce participants to the history and theory of hand papermaking and will have them make a variety of different types of handmade paper.

This would include traditional rag based writing paper; paper made from recycled paper and handmade paper with floral and plant additions. The hand made paper would then be finished so that it can be used for specific purposes such as drawing, writing or collage use.

Participants who undertake this course will at the end of the workshop have a variety of papers made and finished and will have the skills necessary to continue making paper on their own.

All materials supplied and it is suitable for all levels

Dates - 25th and 26th June
Price - €250, deposit 50%.
Deposit – 50%
Times -10am till 4pm
Places - 5
Contact - 086 2451318

* Spaces are limited on these courses so we advise you to book quickly!

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Alltissimo Quintet Lunchtime Concert


This is the poster for the upcoming 'Altissimo' viola quintet lunchtime concert that will be happening in the foyer of The Design Tower on 2nd June at 1pm. The concert duration is approximately fifty minutes. All are welcome, so please spread the word!

You can read more about the concert as well as the instruments in the previous post.

The poster was designed by instrument maker - Michael De Hoog who made all of the instruments that will be played in the recital.

Monday, 16 May 2011

Adornment

Photographer Agata Stoinska and producer/art director Eddie Shanahan have collaborated on a project to celebrate and promote Irish jewellery design. The photographic collection is called Adornment and marks 2011 as being the Year of Craft. The exhibition and travelling exhibition will promote and raise awareness of Irish jewellery design.

Agata approached Eddie to come up with a new idea for an art photo collaboration. Originally it was intended to photograph the work of just six jewellery designers but the interest in the project was so immense that eventually three submissions days were held at D–Light Studios in Dublin with jewellers from all over Ireland submitting work for consideration.

Both Agata and Eddie were astonished at the treasure trove of innovation, imagination and design talent uncovered, so much so that the original single day’s shoot became three days – each with its own theme. Below is a quote from Eddie -

"I have worked with jewellery designers over the years and felt it was time to shine some light on them. When you see the ideas these artists have: the skills, the imagination. When you look at, say, Tuula harrington, who works with reindeer antlers embedded with diamonds. It has become a very exciting venture. I can now understand why people collect it; it can be an inspiration. It makes you so very proud to be Irish and I feel so grateful to all those who created"


Details of the two photographs shown -

Top image - Agate, onyx and mother-of-pearl necklaces by MoMuse. Model: Amber Jean Rowan from Morgan The Agency.
Bottom image - Silver necklace and bangle by Seamus Gill. Model: Jayne Wilde from Morgan The Agency.

The Adornment exhibition is open to the public from 1-14th June at the European Union House, 18 Dawson Street, Dublin 2. Time:  Weekdays 9am – 5pm. It will feature a selection of images from the Adornment project.

For more information, visit the Designer Dublin website.

Credits -
Photography by Agata Stoinska
Concept and art direction by Eddie Shanahan

Images and quote from Eddie Shanahan taken from the Sunday Independant Life magazine 15th May 2011.

Friday, 13 May 2011

'Art in the Garden' Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition

Gormleys Fine Art in association with Hastings Hotels is proud to announce the sculpture event of the year “Art in the Garden” taking place this spring in the Culloden Estate and Spa.

This is one of the largest and most unique outdoor sculpture events to be held in Ireland. The grounds at the Culloden Estate and Spa will showcase 120 pieces of sculpture. Up to sixty leading Irish and International artists will be taking part, including two sculptors from The Design Tower - Ayelet Lalor and Elizabeth O'Kane.

Set against the twelve acres of beautiful secluded gardens and woodland, visitors will be presented with a diverse collection of sculptures, with combined life size works, large installations and smaller more intimate pieces, housed in specially constructed marquee located by the Cultra Inn.

The exhibitions runs from 7th until 22nd May 2011.

The two images above show Ayelet Lalor's piece entitled "I am the daughter of earth and water." Below is Liz O'Kane's two bronze figures, "Ricardo and Janice."

Liz O'Kane will also be showing work in the following exhibitions this summer:
  • Solomon Fine Art, Celebrating 25 years of CAST Foundry, 27 May - 2 June,  number 15 St. Stephen's Green, Dublin (bronze bull).
  • Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast, War on Want charity exhibition and auction, 24 - 28 May (bronze female head).
  • Royal Hibernian Academy of Art Annual Exhibition, Ely Place, Dublin 2, from 24 May to 30 July (two watercolour cityscapes of New York's Lower East Side).

Bronze Heron

Liz O'Kane's most recent public sculpture, of a life size heron, is now on full view in Jordanstown Loughshore Park, County Antrim.

It was commissioned by Newtownabbey Borough Council as one of a series of new sculptures, inspired by the local seascape of Belfast Lough and the Causeway Costal Route.

For more information visit Elizabeth's website.

Monday, 9 May 2011

Lunchtime Quintet performance in The Design Tower


Michiel De Hoog - resident instrument maker in The Design Tower has organised a lunchtime concert in The Design Tower, with string Viola Quintet Altissimo. This quintet is made up of members from the RTE National Symphony Orchestra and is Ireland's only Viola Quintet. This event is also unique as the five instruments have been made by Michiel!

The Alltissimo quartet is comprised of -
Violin 1 Brona Fitzgerald
Violin 2 Camille Bonnard
Viola 1 Adele Johnson
Viola 2 Errika Horsley
Cello Martin Johnson

The performance will take place in the foyer of the Design Tower. The quartet will be performing Dvorak's Vla 5tet Op97 and Ralph Vaughan-Williams "Phantasy Quintet".

The concert will take place on 2nd June at 1pm. (Total Duration max 50mins). All are welcome!

Wednesday, 4 May 2011

Designer Dublin

As part of The Year of Craft 2011, Designer Dublin was set up to showcase the very best of design and craft made in Dublin. The project was initiated by Dublin City Enterprise Board. Several designers from the The Design Tower are represented in the collective - Da Capo, Seamus Gill, Elizabeth O'Kane, Alan Ardiff, Precious, Rangoli, Breda Haugh and Ayelet Lalor.


As part of this network, there will be a craft studio trail around Dublin city on Friday the 10th of June. This is an opportunity to see the masters at work and visit individual studios! Below are a few words from Eibhlin Curley from DCEB.

"Designer Dublin is a collaborative initiative to promote craft and design in Dublin during the month of June. Dublin City Enterprise Board a small business support agency developed the idea. We brainstormed with Dublin designers and state agencies and devised an exciting programme of activities including a craft trail, workshops, exhibitions, craft demonstrations, public talks and it will launch on 1st June 2011.  It is part of the Year of Craft 2011 celebration of craft.

 This initiative is to serve the Dublin craft sector in terms of:
  • Exposing Dublin craft work to the consumer for potential sales.
  •  Showcasing Dublin and it’s craftspersons as a centre for quality Irish crafts in the minds of domestic Irish consumer and international visitors.
  • Branding and profile-raising the substantial craft sector in Dublin.
  • Collective marketing for the sector by building cohesion between craftspersons
  • Strengthening the Dublin Craft sector in terms of communications and marketing.
 Designer Dublin’s objective is to support and encourage the growth of the professional craft industry and to promote Dublin as a centre for exciting and innovative hand made craft.
As part of The Year of Craft 2011, Designer Dublin will showcase the very best of design and craft made in Dublin. We encourage you to experience craft and discover the talented designers of Dublin. Buy a craft and treasure it for life."

Check out the full listing of registered designers - There are also a number of interesting events and talks on design which you can read about on the Designer Dublin website.

We look forward to welcoming you to The Design Tower on 10th June!

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

Studio visit - Breda Haugh, Jeweller and Designer

The 'Studio Visits' will be a monthly blog instalment. We're opening our doors to introduce you to the artists and designers in The Design Tower! Each interview will give you an insight into the individual designer or business.

This month we're chatting to Breda Haugh - jeweller and designer

Breda, tell us about your business and how you came to be a jeweller.

Many varied experiences have led me here to The Design Tower. I was introduced to the artefacts of the National Museum and Gallery as a child which made a lasting impression. Art wasn’t taught particularly well at my school, but a friend’s brother was a designer in advertising – I was intrigued, and for some reason was particularly interested in the idea of design, reading all about it, and the art and design of the early 20th century, particularly that from Russia. I remember too, buying Mary Quant’s autobiography, (the English designer), which fascinated me.  It’s the thinking process I like.

A year after leaving school  I found myself in NCAD and subsequently the Design School, during changing times when it was very interesting to be a student. I eventually specialised in jewellery and was fortunate to be chosen for a summer intern-ship in the Kilkenny Design Workshops, during their heyday, and  subsequently received  a graduate  scholarship  enabling  me to further  study jewellery in London for a few years.

I stayed on for a while  to work in the jewellery industry, really enjoying my time , and making the most of the city. When I moved back to Dublin I was again employed in the trade, both manufacturing and retail. And then I found The Design Tower, where I have been designing and making jewellery ever since.

My fascination with design has taken a slightly more academic direction of late, as I am in the process of completing a taught MA in Design History and Material Culture in NCAD - back to where it all began!

What materials do you like to work with?


Metal was the material of all I experienced in NCAD which fascinated and held me, though wool and weaving intrigued too. I now work exclusively in the precious metals of silver and gold, with periodic enhancement of gemstones. I aim to create jewellery that is an expression of personal adornment and extension of self. Each work reflects my passion for design, and particularly the place metal holds in our national identity.

For conceptual work, along with metals, I like to introduce additional materials such as paper and leather.

What inspires you to design?

Abstract ideas, architecture contemporary design, different cultures, politics, history, natural forms, light and shade, uses of different  materials. Customers inspire too.

Tell us about some interesting projects you have worked on recently

In  2000 I was delighted to be approached by our National Museum to develop a new jewellery collection for their retail outlets, to be based on an artefact from the national collection. Selected for me was the Gold Ribbon Torc, found in Co Antrim -1200-1100 BC. This work with its fine command of technique, sense of proportion and sophisticated design, all  form  a superb example of the craftsman’s Art, making it a very inspiring piece for me to work with, and  one I had long admired. We have little information as to how, or indeed who made it. However  in recent years technical  investigations were carried out by the Irish silversmith Brian Clarke along with his American colleague the jeweller Michael Good, and they concluded that the Torc was made by a version of Anticlastic raising with a red deer’s antler being used in the  process.  

It was required that I  create  work suitable for sale while retaining a sense of the Torc. To do this I carried out research, completing preliminary drawings - from which having gained approval I created the Collection - a contemporary twist on a remarkable piece of art.


This is a full collection of Jewellery both in 18ct gold and Sterling silver. Later  I developed items of jewellery based on Viking artefacts and folk-life items such as the Bridget’s Cross and Harvest Knot, (see below).

In recent years I undertook the commission to develop jewellery based on the Bender Collection of Asian Art, on exhibition in the Museum of Decorative Art and History, Collins Barracks. This comprises brooches and pendants inspired by Fans from the collection.

Tell us about the piece you designed for the Wunderkammer Exhibition on 2009?


“The Gift “ was my piece created for the Wunderkammer Exhibition 2009- based on the Bender Collection, and is a tribute to  the generosity of Albert Bender, the limitations in his own life, his fascination with books, interest in and support of contemporary US and Irish artists and writers. The piece takes the form of two silver small works and an accordion book. The book contains  line drawings and watercolours based on nineteenth century Japanese Prints in the collection, and two lines from W.B Yeats’s poem “The Song of Wandering Aengus”-  “Silver apples of the moon, Golden apples of the sun.”

The silver bowl directly references the gift of fruit in the eighteenth century Thanka of the Arhat Abheda- a disciple of the Buddha, depicts silver and gold apples which are  reminiscent of the poem. The fine lines of gold applied to the external surface of the square silver box reflect the architectural structures portrayed in many of the Japanese prints, and signify confinement. In contrast the inside being is devoid of line, reflecting the notion of a certain freedom.

Are you working on any interesting commissions or have you exciting plans for the coming year?

My latest collection, the silver and baroque pearl,“Silver Circles in Space “ - see image below - inspired by Indian jewellery and circles floating in space, was selected as one of the top 50 products in Showcase 2011.

I recently completed a commission to develop jewellery for the Glasnevin Trust based on their Angel/ Flower logo. The jewellery is for sale in the retail outlet at the museum in Glasnevin Cemetery.

I have a few other projects in the pipeline, for which I will be able to give some information at a later date.

Can you tell us where your work is available to purchase?

A selection of my stockists include;

In Dublin
  • Archaelogy – the National Museum, Kildare Street, Dublin 2.
  • Decorative Arts and History, The National Museum, Collins Barracks, Dublin 7.
  • DesignYard, Nassau Street, Dublin 2.
Outside Dublin
  • Little Fish Designs,  Blackrock Shopping Centre, Co Dublin.
  • Avoca Handweavers, Kilmaconogue, Co Wicklow.
  • The Cat and the Moon, Castle Street,  Sligo.
  • The Museum of Country Life, Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co Mayo.
A selection of items are available on the website www.Siopa.ie (Irish Gifts), and exclusively for the US market www.irishheart.com

My work is available also in my studio, where I see clients for private commissions, for which I prefer to work by appointment.

Thanks for talking to us Breda! Next month we will be featuring another designer from The Design Tower. You can also read the other interviews in the series.

Photo credit - Studio portrait of Breda by Lee Harding.

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.