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Gallery Opening Hours:
Tuesday to Saturday: 11am - 6pm
Thursday: 11am - 7pm

Office Opening Hours:
Monday - Friday 10:00 - 6:00

Temple Bar Gallery & Studios
5 - 9 Temple Bar
Dublin 2
Phone +353 (0)1 671 0073
Fax +353 (0)1 677 7527

Emai: info [at] templebargallery [dot] com

Temple Bar Gallery & Studios is grant aided by An Chomhairle Ealaíon / The Arts Council
 

Bonfires

John Duncan

Preview: Thursday 26 February 2009, 6pm - 8pm
Exhibition continues 27 February -  4 April 2009

Temple Bar Gallery and Studios is pleased to present Bonfires, an exhibition by Belfast-based photographer John Duncan. This exhibition presents a large body of work by Duncan, produced over three years, documenting the long-standing tradition of bonfire building by Protestant communities in Belfast. Duncan’s photographs capture bonfires waiting to be set alight, built in preparation for the annual 11th July celebrations commemorating the defeat of James Stuart at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. Amongst the Protestant community in Belfast, bonfires serve as a powerful provocation; a way in which Protestant identity can be asserted and a sense of solidarity and continuity re-affirmed.

Duncan’s photographs frame and measure the bonfire structures against their various social settings, revealing both a sense of Belfast’s changing urban landscape and the deep divisions that, despite political progress, still affect Northern Ireland long after the ceasefires. The bonfires have recently been challenged from a number of quarters: from within the Protestant community for damage caused to property and surrounding areas; from developers who covet the waste land they are built on; and from environmentalists who express concerns about the pollution they cause. Seen against this backdrop of competing agendas, the bonfires come to express a form of resistance, and their building a kind of raw ingenuity.

Duncan’s work dwells on the fact that each bonfire has a singular structure, an identity. They are sculptural and architectural oddities with many resonances through history and art, from high-rise flats to military watchtowers and gun emplacements, from the Empire State Building to the Tower of Babel. Duncan’s photographs are alive to these broader themes and their various photographic connections, for example, with Bernd and Hilla Becher’s meticulous documenting of industrial architecture. But the typological aspects of the work are just one of its many rich undercurrents, never diminishing the primary impact of the photographs or the importance of the social and political reality that they confront head on.

John Duncan was born and lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He studied Documentary Photography at Newport, Wales and Fine Art Photography at Glasgow School of Art. Since 1994 he has co-edited Source photographic magazine. His work has been shown in various solo and group exhibitions including, Belfast Exposed 2008, Ffotogallery Cardiff 2008, Imago, Centre of Photography Salamanca 1997, Stills Gallery Edinburgh 1998, On the Bright Side of Life, Neue Gesellschaft fur bildende Kunst Berlin 1998, Gallery of Photography Dublin 2002, Photography Towards a Sculptural Impulse, Dazibao Montréal 2006, Gimpel Fils London 2006, East, Norwich Gallery 2006, Loaded Landscapes, Museum of Contemporary Photography Chicago 2007.

Press Contact: Rayne Booth - Temple Bar Gallery & Studios - t. + 353 1 671 0073 - e. press@templebargallery.com

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