The John Hewitt Summer School is back at The Market Place Theatre in Armagh, and as ever, will feature stunning and accessible visual art.
Acclaimed journalist Malachi O’Doherty will be
exhibiting a brand new photographic exhibition, ‘India: Faces and Scenes’,
supported by Andras Hotels. O’Doherty, who lived in India for four years in the
1970’s, returned for the first time in January this year as a Major Artist
funded by the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. His main project was to
research a book, but he took cameras with him and brought back striking images
of people and places. These include scenes from the cremation grounds at the
Ganges, a market place in Kolkata and portraits of people he met at random.
Malachi O’Doherty is better known as a writer and
broadcaster. His eighth book will be published this summer, ‘Fifty Years On’, a
reflection on change in Northern Ireland since the start of the Troubles.
O’Doherty says “I have always had cameras with me
but there is that demarcation in journalism that writing is one job and taking
the pictures is another, and there is a lot of sense to that.” He brought
cameras with him when, in January, he went back to Brij Ghat, a pilgrim town on
the Ganges. “I walked along the Ganges and saw the cremation fires. First I
photographed them a bit sneakily then walked closer and one family invited me
to take pictures of the body being prepared, a woman. Her hands and bangles
were exposed, and they spread incense over her and then piled grasses and logs
on top of her and, after prayers, set her alight.”
Malachi says he isn’t seeking to tell any
particular story about India, “I just responded to what struck me. In one
series of pictures of Sikh men in the Punjab I just saw this man with a rugged
face and turban and thought he could be from any century at all and I asked him
if I could take his picture and he stood there and let me do it.” In Kolkata he
walked through the fish market and photographed beggars, workmen and basically
anybody who caught his eye. “I am not saying this is a statement about India. I
make my statements in words. Photography for me is not my assertion about
anything, it is my response.”
The exhibition, ‘India: Faces and Scenes’, is
launched on Wednesday 24 July at 4.45pm by Lord Diljit Rana, MBE, Baron
of Malone, who is one of the ‘faces’. The exhibition continues at The Market
Place until Saturday 7 September, giving ample opportunity to view these
stunning photographs.
The second exhibition of the Summer School, is the
superb ‘Blood Horses’. Artist Paddy Lennon from Wexford and poet Moyra
Donaldson from Co Down both have horses in their blood. The exhibition and
limited edition book, ‘Blood Horses’, is the result of their collaboration, and
reflects not only both artists’ mastery of their medium, but also their
lifelong experience with all things equine.
Lennon’s paintings combine with Donaldson’s poetry
to evoke the history of our human relationship with horses. Central to the book
is the story of the three Arab stallions that were the founding fathers of the
modern thoroughbred, The Byerley Turk, The Darley Arabian and the Godolphin
Barb. All three stallions have fascinating stories and the Byerley Turk has
Irish connections, winning at Downpatrick Races before being ridden at the
Battle of the Boyne by his owner, Captain Robert Byerley.
The paintings and poems also reflect the influence
that horses have in the lives of those who work with them and ride them – the
glories and tragedies of this relationship.
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