Tóraigh na Tóraithe/

Hunt the Hunters

Hunting for sport is not traditional to Ireland

Like so many other colonial introductions around the world, it is a hangover, a visceral example of the generational trauma and post-colonial policy structures we are still living with.

From the Murdúch to the story of Oisín and the Hare, a large percentage of our mythology brings with it an instruction to cherish biodiversity and the sovereignty of our sibling fauna and cousin flora.

Native mammals in particular have a deep symbolic and spiritual connection to the other realms and the things we cannot see. This ancient knowledge of the intelligence of the natural world is being confirmed by modern science too.

With this collection, panels made of alternative photographic processes, collage, ink and copper, I am deliberately subverting the paradigm. Dressing animals in colonial hunting attire, their louche demeanour and confident faces challenging the viewer with a simple question: how would you like it?

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Exhibited at:

RHA Annual Exhibition 2024, Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin

Lughnasadh 2023, St. Peter’s Church, Cork

Roundy 2023, Roundy Bar, Castle Street, Cork

Appose 2022, St. Peter’s Church, Cork

Materials:

Toned cyanotype

India ink

Hemp fibres

Copper leaf

on Arches 300gsm

Notes:

The copper is raw and untreated, meaning it will oxidise to blue, green and black tones over time

Animals:

Iolar Órga 🦅 (golden eagle)

Sionnach 🦊 (fox)

Gráinneog 🦔 (hedgehog)

Broc 🐼 (that’s a badger)

Fia Rua 🦌 (red deer)

Iora Rua 🐿️ (red squirrel)

Giorria 🐰 (hare)

Gabhar 🐐 (goat, old Irish)

Bradán 🐟 (salmon)

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