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GUH 'subject' of art exhibit E-mail
Written by Staff Reporter   
Wednesday, 23 July 2008

Galway University Hospital examines the contemporary 'subject' with a multifaceted exhibition of artwork by artists Allyson Keehan, Ciaran O'Sullivan, Clare Henderson, Emmet Kierans, Jennifer Cunningham, Joe McNicholas, Louise Neiland, Mike Delohery and Nicole Tilly.

As part of the Arts Festival, 'Subjected' brings together artists whose work is linked by their contemporary interrogation of the still life and portraiture traditions. The exhibition maps the increasingly complex intersections between the artist, subject and the object, the seen and unseen, the beautiful and the uncanny. This mapping is carried by artists who though leaning heavily on art practices considered traditional, have determinedly departed from the traditional context.

Executed with a seductive accessible realism, these works are at once both familiar and alien. These artists are resisting the tide of new media whilst carving out a new realism, one that is prying at the personal poetic rather than preaching the political. The unremarkable objects and interrupted people examined within the works become less subjects to observe and more points of entry to very real and quite often universal truths.

This is the first time that these works have been shown in Galway and the exhibition provides Galway audiences with an opportunity to view some of the best up-and-coming contemporary Irish artists.

According to the organisers, the positioning of this exhibition, which converses through chosen subjects about a life in flux, in the hospital, makes sense. It is fitting, they say, that the truths the artists are trying to communicate find their voice within a context that is truly universal, a democratic stage. The beauty of the work enlivens the stagnant structures and injects a frenetic energy into these quiet plains.

Subjected will be situated on the main corridor of Block 2C and in the Foyer of University College Hospital Galway. The exhibition will be on display until Friday 29 August.


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