Engagement & Learning
There were significant innovations in IMMA’s Engagement & Learning programme during 2022.
IMMA had a busy and successful year in 2022. One of the highlights was the museum’s first annual Earth Rising Eco Art Festival in October, which brought together artists and activists for a weekend of ideas and creativity. The Engagement team convened a series of discussions with renowned international speakers, including a keynote talk by Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino, who advocated for the critical role of design in tackling the climate crisis, and Lucy Jones, who presented new scientific research on the importance of forging a bond with nature for our health and wellness. The festival received tremendous feedback from eventgoers and participants, and many ideas will be fed into planning for the 2023 event.
In November, IMMA hosted an international research conference to mark a century since the formation of the Irish Free State, with more than 30 speakers presenting on the role of art and artists in shaping the country in the aftermath of World War 1. The conference also situated this work within a global context of emerging nation states and independence movements in this period. Both in-person attendees at The Lighthouse Cinema and a global audience were able to follow the programme through a high-quality broadcast. This research intervention will be built upon in advance of the 2023 exhibition “Self-Determination: A Global Perspective,” which will take place in the Autumn.
International Research Conference 2022: 100 YEARS OF SELF-DETERMINATION
IMMA’s SPICE Project, financed by the EU Horizon 2020 fund, continued to promote citizen curation, and connect with diverse sets of marginal, migrant, and minority groups. The project showcased an exhibition of art from youths in Oberstown detention centre and co-hosted events with Black & Irish, MASI and, ArtMulti. The project brought new important audiences, particularly from minoritized groups to the museum in an organic, community-led way and solidified IMMA’s relationships with community groups including Fatima Groups United.
IMMA’s talks programme had a full year, with highlights including the More-than-human – Hybrid Radio Show co-curated with Dublin Digital Radio, late gallery openings and evening events in the Courtyard, and a talks partnership with the Project Arts Centre to present the all-day international seminar: Tapes Under the Bed in November. All talks and seminars were edited post-broadcast and made available for public listening on IMMA’s Soundcloud.
Open Studio with Clodagh Emoe: Clodagh Emoe, IMMA Outdoors, A Radical Plot Open Studios, October 2021.
Photo by Louis Haugh
IMMA’s Residency Programme – A Radical Plot, continued to host a variety of artists who feed into the work of the museum. Notable participants during 2022 included ANU’s The Wernicke’s Area, which was featured in The Project Space in October and Clodagh Emoe’s Seed STUDIO, which presented a series of engagements over the course of the Earth Rising weekend.
Art Nomads Collective availed of an IMMA Studio on a regular basis to host nationwide members at IMMA for creative interventions. Navine G Dossos and Aoife Dunne spent time in residence as they made stunning artworks for the IMMA Courtyard. And IMMA was delighted to realise a residency with artist/photographer Suné Woods in partnership with Light Work. This exchange enabled IMMA to double an offering for the International Photography Award by creating an opportunity for Jan McCullough to work with Light Work and Suné Woods to work with IMMA. In September IMMA was delighted to welcome our fourth Fulbright Scholar Jasmine Burns.
Kind Words Can Never Die Workshop: Navine G. Dossos, Kind Words Can Never Die Workshop 2022.
Photo by Louis Haugh
During the year, IMMA also partnered with the Dean Art Studio, a new multi-disciplinary hub in the heart of Dublin City Centre, to offer an annual studio to four artistic practices — Thaí Muniz, Brian Teeling, Salvatore Fullam and Elayne Harrington.
The 2022 IMMA Summer School selected participants from 22 countries and featured a range of national and international artists, theorists, and educators. The theme of the year’s summer school was Self-Determination, and it is part of a wider programme of activities related to the museum’s Self Determination research conference which took place in November.
IMMA’s Art & Ageing programme returned to in-person visits with an invited group of members of the Irish Dementia Working Group and Dementia Carers Campaign Network attending the first in-person Azure tour post pandemic. IMMA also continued to build a network of parties interested in art and ageing and hosted the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland’s Health and Well-being Day in May.
Finally, IMMA’s Slow Art program launched a series of nine videos showcasing work from IMMA’s Queer Embodiment exhibition on Slow Art Day in April.