Ella Bertilsson, Kathy Tynan, Emily Waszak: Faigh Amach

Friday 1 August – Sunday 21 September 2025
Ella Bertilsson, Kathy Tynan, Emily Waszak: Faigh Amach | Friday 1 August – Sunday 21 September 2025 | Temple Bar Gallery + Studios | Image: the background is, from bottom left to top right, pale grey-ish green fading towards pale yellow-green and then through turquoise to a saturated dark blue; against this are the dates of the show – relatively small – the names of the three artists underneath that, in large-ish white sans-serif letters, then occupying most of the bottom of the portrait-oriented image are the words Faigh Amach, just in white outline

Faigh Amach is an initiative by Temple Bar Gallery + Studios (TBG+S) in partnership with Culture Ireland and Southwark Park Galleries (SPG), London, to support an artist in presenting their first solo exhibition outside Ireland.

Roughly translating as ‘discover’, Faigh Amach takes place as a group exhibition at TBG+S in Summer 2025, bringing together three artists selected through an open call process in 2024: Ella BertilssonKathy Tynan, Emily Waszak. One of the three exhibiting artists will be invited to present their first international solo exhibition at SPG Lake Gallery in Spring 2026. During the planning and duration of Faigh Amach, SPG Director Judith Carlton and Deputy Director Charlotte Baker will conduct in-person and online studio visits with the three artists, as well as visiting the exhibition at TBG+S before making the selection for their programme.

Ella Bertilsson uses images and materials related to pop culture and the aesthetics of nostalgia to evoke a shared sense of memory and place. Her installations, which often incorporate film and performance, use the visual language of magical realism and absurdism to conjure darkly humorous and dreamlike sensory environments. The clash of bizarreness and naivety reflects the impact of anxiety and precarity in everyday life. Bertilsson’s installation for Faigh Amach creates a new encounter with a recent film work, A PEANUT WORM’S DREAM, as viewers nestle into an immersive interior space behind a mountain scene of a photographic backdrop. Now emerging from the film itself, some of its characters – a fish, and a goat/deer – begin to populate their real-world surroundings outside of the confines of the film’s storage unit setting.

Kathy Tynan’s paintings of familiar cityscapes and domestic scenes illuminate moments of affection, intimacy and curiosity. Rather than focussing her gaze on monumental landmarks, Tynan instead attributes value to that which is otherwise overlooked. Her semi-autobiographical subjects include her own family and friends but speak more broadly to shared enthusiasms, experiences of care, community, and relationships. Tynan’s group of recent paintings in the exhibition collate a number of personal scenes from memory and family photographs. Patterned duvets and pyjamas conflate timelines between the artist’s own childhood and her experience as a mother with a young son. The sequence of paintings appear as a panorama of cinematic flashbacks.

Emily Waszak’s textile and assemblage works are informed by rituals of her Japanese cultural heritage, experiences of grief and the landscape of her home in Donegal. Using both ancient and contemporary weaving techniques, alongside the collection and display of found materials and other hand-made objects, Waszak combines processes that transcend time and place to find meaning in loss and understand how to access otherworldliness. Waszak has produced several large-scale woven works for the exhibition using a combination of discarded waste textiles gathered from industrial sites in Dublin, and fragments of fabric with deep personal significance. The textiles loom above a group of clay vessels holding ceremonial objects such as animal bones, which can be used as shakers in a form of incantation to connect with the spirit world.

Ella Bertilsson was born in Umeå, Sweden, and works in Dublin and Kilkenny. Her recent and upcoming solo exhibitions include The Horse, Dublin (2025); Ballina Art Centre (2024); The Dock, Carrick-on-Shannon (2023); The Complex, Dublin (2022).

Kathy Tynan was born and works in Dublin. Her recent solo exhibitions include Kevin Kavanagh, Dublin (2024); Dunamaise Arts Centre, Portlaoise (2022); Highlanes Gallery (with Andrew Vickery), Drogheda (2020); The LAB, Dublin (2019).

Emily Waszak was born in North Carolina, United States, and works between Dublin and Donegal. Her recent and upcoming solo exhibitions include Regional Cultural Centre, Letterkenny (2026); Pallas Projects, Dublin (2024); TU Dublin (2023).

Southwark Park Galleries is an interdisciplinary arts organisation in South East London. Through a locally relevant and internationally significant programme of exhibitions, performances and public engagement, their mission is to connect people using the intersection of art, nature and culture to facilitate meaning and wellbeing across communities. Established in 1984, they have a thriving reputation as a test site for experimental practice by commissioning artists at a critical stage to make their most ambitious work for exhibition.

www.southwarkparkgalleries.org


Gallery Talk: Ella Bertilsson in conversation with Aideen Barry

  • 01 August 2025

Art Walk: August 2025

  • 13 August 2025

Gallery Talk: Emily Waszak in conversation with Sara Greavu

  • 15 August 2025

Workshop: Shimenawa, Threshold to the Sacred

  • 15 August 2025

Gallery Talk: Kathy Tynan in conversation with Ramon Kassam

  • 05 September 2025

Culture Night 2025: Gallery Late Opening

  • 19 September 2025
Friday 1 August – Sunday 21 September 2025
Temple Bar Gallery + Studios
5 - 9 Temple Bar
Dublin 2
Telephone: 353 1 671 0073
info@templebargallery.com
www.templebargallery.com
Opening hours / start times:
Tuesday 11:00 - 18:00
Wednesday 11:00 - 18:00
Thursday 11:00 - 18:00
Friday 11:00 - 18:00
Saturday 11:00 - 18:00
Admission / price: Free

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