Morph and Transform

Saturday 10 December 2016 – Sunday 29 January 2017
Aideen Barry: Possession, 2011, Single Channel digital video with sound, 6'30\

Animation is usually experienced as TV cartoons and popular cinema. In the Project Spaces, IMMA presents a series of artworks by contemporary artists working with animated drawings and materials, as well as exploring ideas and images of change and transformation. The animated works are accompanied by a season of workshops and events for children and young people.

Aideen Barry presents old and new work, and some experimental musings straight from the studio in Morph and Transform. Her film work Possession, 2011, is presented alongside Traume Terrain, 2016, a vitrine showcase containing a frieze of drawings on a concertina book, with multiple video projections of moving images. In this work Barry explores the idea of the drawing notebook being a site of germination for her moving image works. This is an experimental work that the artist has been working on while undertaking her residency at IMMA. Also presented is a short animation piece Stop Motion Animation made by Barry and The Revolutionary Girls, the outcome of a workshop by The School for Revolutionary Girls as part of A Fair Land in August 2016.

In the film work Possession, 2011, the protagoinist is positioned as a product of the environment in which she is immersed the character has become a personification of cognitive dissonance, it pertains to the idea of a certain possession or enchantment, as a housewife who succumbs to her circumstances, trapped, crushed by a contemporary House of Usher in the middle of abandoned and incomplete housing developments from which she is incapable of fleeing.

The character responds to an extremely alienating and unhealthy domestic situation. A set of electrical appliances, symbolic instruments of her obligations by which she is possessed, round off the grotesque setting surrounding the chores that she is endlessly preoccupied with. The setting chosen by the artist to challenge reality arises from the empathy stemming from her feminine condition. The woman who Aideen Barry incarnates in this performance lives in a continuous present of routine and anxiety in which she lets herself go, in a free fall to nowhere, once she has reached the denial of her own existence. Lacking will, knowledge and freedom; the conscience abolished, un-viable without imagination, sensation or memory, she becomes an object or, even more, the extension of others to whom she gives the life and autonomy she has renounced. With these elements she sketches a phenomenological reasoning of enigmatic dark humour.

Aideen Barry ( b. 1979 Cork)  is visual artist with a national and international profile, whose means of expression are interchangeable, incorporating performance, sculpture, film and lens based media. Barry recently showed a survey solo show at Royal Hibernian Academy entitled Brittlefield and will show at Block 336 London in the new year. She have been Artist in Residence on the IMMA residency programme since the beginning of summer ’16. Barry will undertake a fellowship at the Vermont Studio Centre (US) programme in 2017 and will show solo at MARFA Contemporary Texas in Jaunary 2018. She recently won the prestigious 2017 Lexicon Commission Award and Modern Ireland in 100 artworks from the Royal Irish Academy, she was awarded an Arts Council of Ireland Bursary Award in 2016.

Barry’s works are in permanent collections at the Arts Council of Ireland, The Headlands Centre for the Arts ( San Francisco), Art Omi Collection, ( New York), NUIG Collection, Galway, Mayo & Dublin Council collections, the OPW and at the Centre de Art Contemporary, Malaga ESP. Barry teaches at Limerick School of Art and Design on the post grad and undergrad programmes.

Image: Aideen Barry: Possession, 2011, Single Channel digital video with sound, 6'30" loop. Courtesy of the artist.
Saturday 10 December 2016 – Sunday 29 January 2017
IMMA
Royal Hospital, Kilmainham
Dublin 8
Telephone: +353 1 612 9900
www.imma.ie
Opening hours / start times:
Tuesday 11:30 - 17:30
Wednesday 11:30 - 17:30
Thursday 11:30 - 17:30
Friday 11:30 - 17:30
Saturday 10:00 - 17:30
Sunday 12:00 - 17:30
Admission / price: Free
Bank Holidays open 12:00 – 17:30.

 
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