Discover our Studio Artists
01 — 31 January 2021
In these extraordinary times, when our artists are not able to go into their studios and must be curtailed in their making, we invite you to visit their pages on our website.
25 November 2017
Temple Bar Gallery + Studios have partnered with the Irish Architecture Foundation to deliver a film screening of Wings of Desire, in the IAF theatre as part of Dublin Art Book Fair: Art and Architecture Interwoven.
Saturday 25 November 2017 | 6.30pm
Irish Architecture Foundation
Free admission, booking essential.
Temple Bar Gallery + Studios have partnered with the Irish Architecture Foundation to deliver a film screening of Wings of Desire, in the IAF theatre as part of Dublin Art Book Fair: Art and Architecture Interwoven, sponsored by Henry J Lyons. Wings of Desire, directed by Wim Wenders in 1987, has been selected and will be introduced by Kathleen James Chakraborty, Professor Art and Architectural History, UCD and former IAF Chair.
In Wings of Desire, director Wim Wenders’ (Paris, Texas, Alice in the Cities) most metaphysical work, a guardian angel desires nothing more than to be human. Every day, Dammiel (Bruno Ganz, The American Friend, Downfall) listens to the thoughts of mortals who play their lives out on the streets of West Berlin. He finds himself entranced by a trapeze artist (Solveig Dommartin, Until the End of the World) whose eloquent expression of her doubts and fears makes him yearn for a life where he can feel happiness and love.
Like Michael Powell’s A Matter of Life and Death, the afterlife in Wings of Desire is a world in monochrome. Only the living can see in full colour and it is their lives, with their moments of sorrow and joy, that Wim Wenders captures so eloquently in this singularly original film that was co-written with Peter Handke (The Goalkeeper’s Fear of the Penalty, Wrong Move). Winner of the Best Director prize at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival, Wings of Desire is both a paean to Germany’s capital and a rumination on human existence, and remains one of the most vital films ever made.
Kathleen James-Chakraborty has been Professor of Art History & Cultural Policy, UCD, since 2007. James-Chakraborty is a historian of early modern and modern architecture and an expert on twentieth-century German and American modernism.
01 — 31 January 2021
In these extraordinary times, when our artists are not able to go into their studios and must be curtailed in their making, we invite you to visit their pages on our website.
01 — 31 January 2021
Stepping in to the TBG+S Gallery is always a transformative experience. Leaving behind the cobbled streets, touristy pubs and buskers of Temple Bar, we enter a place of integrity, contemplation and experimentation.