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To Celebrate the opening of Realm the accompanying exhibition to the Primary Colours Residency I sat down with the exhibiting artists and recipients of the residency Jo Lewis and Aideen Connolly to discuss their work and exhibition. This exhibition developed from the Primary Colours residency, where each of you worked with different primary schools to create work. Could you talk about that? Aideen: We were both assigned schools to work with, and I was lucky enough to be assigned the national school my children attended.
The school is just out in rural Sligo near the Gleniff Horseshoe. There was a lot of flexibility in what I could do with the children. I had them make ink using natural materials, and on other days, we just spent the time up on the mountain Gleniff Horseshoe building shelters, drawing and foraging for plants to make ecoprints and cyanotypes.
And it was very connected with the landscape. Jo: I was excited to get the residency especially as it was linked to an exhibition. Working with the children, it was so liberating to try things that were ephemeral. We would make works in nature from nature, work not made to last before being taken back by the landscape. It was great how the kids embraced this way of making because, so often they can get tied up with the concept of ownership.
They really embraced the temporary rather than being very precious about the works they made. When you are in the studio, what are the first steps you take in creating a work? Jo: The materials I use inspire me. An important part of the process is finding the materials, bits of wood in skips or scraps that are left over. You see so much being thrown out. It always upsets me to see stuff being thrown out and not being used again. My partner is a builder, so he always has pieces of wood or other scraps hanging around that I can put to good use.
I collect a lot from the garden as well. I wash the waste, like the cucumbers and roots. I think the act of washing them is so important because it gives you a chance to look at them. You get to look at them from a different perspective. Seeing them from a different perspective has really inspired me to, in a way, play with the materials.