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Monument No.2 (detail), Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh, 2020, oil on canvas, 182 x 182cm. Courtesy of the artist, Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Dublin & 532 Gallery Thomas Jaeckel, New York.

Deep Mapping: Unseen Landscapes

Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh

11 February - 31 March 

Opening Reception: Sat 11 February, 2:30pm, all are welcome, no booking required

 GALLERY MAP         EXHIBITION BROCHURE

Exploring her artworks on display, join Sinéad in the gallery on Friday 24 February, where she will discuss her methodical painting process, exploration and elaboration of bound space.

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"We need more fluid ways of perceiving the layers that are everywhere, and new ways of calling attention to the passages between old and new, of weaving the old place into the new place." – Lucy Lippard (i)

In his book, Mapping the Invisible Landscape, American scholar Kent C. Ryden reminds us that landscapes have ‘unseen components’, made up of subjective experience, memory, and narrative.(ii) According to Ryden, our sense of place consists of deeply ingrained, experiential knowledge, and an awareness of our communal and personal histories. In many ways, it is these hidden aspects of place that Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh summons each time she paints. Over the course of several decades, the artist has cultivated a semantically rich visual language, comprising three distinct but overlapping strands: that of structure, landscape, and pure abstraction.

For her solo exhibition at Solstice Arts Centre, Ní Mhaonaigh presents a series of new paintings that characteristically feature prominent elements of the built environment: vernacular structures, houses, factories, sheds. However, one notes that over time, some of these buildings have been demolished, therefore reframing the durational function of painting as one of recording a landscape in flux. These works portray absent forms in a moment prior to their erasure; however, they also trace the enduring hum of subatomic particles, or the ways in which enigmatic shadows continue to haunt the horizon. Movingly, the artist describes this kind of spatial and temporal dislocation as “working with an ever-present void.”

Deep mapping is described by Mike Pearson and Michael Shanks as attempting to “record and represent the grain and patina of place through juxtapositions and interpenetrations of the historical and the contemporary, the political and the poetic, the discursive and the sensual.”(iii) This intuitive and embodied form of mapping allows Ní Mhaonaigh to dig deep into a place. When observed through a spatial lens, landscape becomes a limitless container of knowledge; a site where material and immaterial remnants converge and coexist.

These paintings also consider present-day human relations to the land at a very basic level: How do we dwell? Who determines the value or usefulness of knowledge? How do we cultivate sustainable communities and authentic lives? Representing only the empirical physicality of landscape, traditional maps fail to convey how place is perceived and inhabited by different people over time.(iv) By contrast, through the non-linear act of painting, Ní Mhaonaigh traces unseen layers across exterior and interior registers to purposefully situate herself in the world.

Text by Joanne Laws 

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i.) Lucy R. Lippard, The Lure of the Local: Senses of Place in a Multicentred Society (New York: The New Press, 1997)

ii.) Kent C. Ryden, Mapping the Invisible Landscape: Folklore, Writing, and the Sense of Place (Iowa City: Iowa University Press, 1993) p 17

iii.) Mike Pearson and Michael Shanks, Theatre/Archaeology (London: Routledge, 2001) pp 64-65

iv.) Leticia Sabino et al., ‘Empathy Walks’ in Phil Cohen and Mike Duggan (eds.), New directions in radical cartography: Why the map is never the territory (Landham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 2021) p 183

Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh's interview on RTÉ Arena

11.02.2023

LISTEN HERE

Learning Resource for Junior & Senior Leaving Cert Cycle

RESOURCE SUPPORTING CONTENT AREA 3: TODAY'S WORLD

Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh (b.1977) graduated with a BA in Fine Art Painting from Dublin Institute of Technology in 2001. She was recently elected as a member of the RHA, and was awarded The Hotron ARTWORKS Award from Visual Carlow for outstanding work. In 2019 she received an arts bursary from Wicklow County Council and in 2018, she was shortlisted for the John Moores Painting Prize. Her recent solo exhibitions include: Uillinn, West Cork Arts Centre, Cork (2021); Dúil Series, Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Dublin (2021) & Macalla, Mermaid Arts Centre, Co. Wicklow (2020). Ní Mhaonaigh’s work is held in many important public collections including; the Office of Public Works; the Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris; Highlanes Gallery, Drogheda; and The Arts Council. Her work also features in numerous private collections acroess Ireland, Europe and the USA.

Take a Virtual 360° Tour of the Exhibition

To navigate: 

- Click & Drag to look around the space, or use the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard to look in each direction.
- Click on the rings throughout the space to move around, or use the up and down arrow keys to move forward and back.
- Use the scroll wheel on your mouse to zoom in and out, or use the plus and minus keys on your keyboard.
- When finished in the Foyer, click on the small blue circle 'Exhibition continues upstairs' to continue the tour in the upstairs galleries.
- Click 'view fullscreen' on the bottom right to enter fullscreen mode.