Kim Crowley: Residency & Exhibition

Thursday 5 March – Sunday 3 May 2026
Kim Crowley: Residency & Exhibition | Thursday 5 March  – Sunday 3 May 2026 | Triskel Arts Centre | Kim Crowley: logo for Office of Work, via Instagram | black background with large white, filled circle on it, and on it a clever disassembly of what was probably initially the letters ‘OOW’; in black sans-serif text we see  the top of an O, next to it the bottom of a second O, and to its right a W with a chunk taken out of it bottom-left; below the circle there is a white line, and below it the words, in white, sans-serif, ‘Office of Work’ and below it ‘Oifig na hOibre’, also in white but in a fairly cursive serif font.

Kim Crowley is a curator based in Cork City. Her practice is concerned with expanded artist publishing as curatorial practice. Kim’s research explores publishing as public-meaning-making, looking at the possibilities of dissemination both within and beyond the traditional bound object. She is interested in exploring collaborative and generative ways of working while interrogating the function and experience of the exhibition space.

Kim Crowley will establish a curatorial research ‘office’ called the Office of Work (OOW) in the TRISKEL SAMPLE Project Space. The OOW looks to research and interrogate ideas around art making and labour.

Working in the arts can be precarious for many artists and creatives, with people having to take on low paid, short-term jobs to survive and fund their practice. Many artists are dependent on yearly funding cycles and participating in short term projects. Kim is researching the relationship between art and work, looking at precarity and investigating the importance of support networks. During the residency her research will explore how repeated and shared movements, gestures and experiences can work as an antidote and have a lasting positive impact.

The Office of Work will mirror the aesthetics of a traditional office, a nod to the need for creatives to enter environments adjacent to their practice. A questionnaire will be circulated that can be filled out in the space, or online for people who can’t visit the space in person. There will also be an opportunity to ‘book’ appointments to visit the space where she will initiate one-to-one conversations with people about their attitudes and experiences of work. During the residency she will create textual and visual scores that respond to ideas of work and precarity. Visitors to the Office will have the opportunity to activate these scores and add to them.

Thursday 5 March – Sunday 3 May 2026
Triskel Arts Centre
14A Tobin Street, Cork City
Telephone: +353 21 4272022
www.triskelartscentre.ie
Opening hours / start times:
  • Monday–Thursday 4–9pm
  • Friday–Sunday 11am–6pm
Admission / price: Free

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