Irish Museums Association annual forum

IMA_Forum_2009

‘Blow Your Own Trumpet’ — IMA’s annual practitioners’ forum — is set to take place on Friday, 10 July from 10-4 pm at Daniel O’Connell House (58 Merrion Square South).

The day promises to be a very interesting one, with presentations from museum professionals around the country on recent initiatives in their institutions. It’s a great way to get a snapshot of what’s happening across Irish museums, and have an annual chinwag with others in the biz.

For a full line-up of presentations click here, or on the image above.

For further information or bookings contact the IMA Administrator, Carla Marrinan, at 01 4120939 or office@irishmuseums.org

Sculpture in the Parklands wins Business to Arts Award

Congrats to Sculpture in the Parklands & recent programme alum Kevin O’Dwyer, recipient of the 2009 Business to Arts Corporate (Cultural) Social Responsibility Award along with Bord na Móna!

B2A_Parklands

Their citation:

Bord na Móna believe that a crucial part of their social responsibility is to recognise the rich industrial and natural legacy of the peat lands of Ireland. Sculpture in the Parklands has grown from the involvement of artist Kevin O’Dwyer who invited artists to participate in an International Sculpture Symposium in 2000 to celebrate the heritage of Lough Boora bog in Offaly. This became the impetus for the 50-acre sculpture park, open every day to the public, which continues to invite artists to create site-specific work. Offaly County Council and the Crafts Council of Ireland worked with the partners last year on a major arts programme alongside the International Peat Congress in Lough Boora.

A well deserved accolade!

Arts Council Event Calendar Launch

The blog’s been quiet lately as I’ve been preoccupied with end of term and the coming exam period– and with few jobs coming through the pipeline there hasn’t been as much need to update the jobs page… but an interesting tidbit in the Arts Council’s newsletter notes the imminent launch of their new online event calendar.

Organisations are invited to submit their upcoming events to the calendar, which may prove a handy centralised resource for all the cultural happenings in the country.

Post-gorilla

guerrillaLast night’s Guerrilla Girls event at NCAD was lively and entertaining– their take on feminist art-world protest certainly draws some strong reactions, and I was interested to hear comments from the crowd assembled… one of which was the opinion that Irish women contemporary visual artists are perhaps more prominent/successful than their male counterparts (a statement which set off ripples of murmurs, mainly in disagreement I surmised?) As another audience member pointed out, 80% of the student body at NCAD is female (is this true? I have no idea.) Still another noted that while this was the case, women did not figure as prominently on selection panels and other positions of power within the Irish art world. I added the observation that nearly all of the directors of the National cultural institutions of Ireland were also male (which is certainly true– out of the nine institutions who make up the CNCI [Abbey, Chester Beatty Library, Crawford Art Gallery, Irish Museum of Modern Art, National Archives, National Concert Hall, National Gallery of Ireland, National Library, National Museum], only two are directed by women– this statistic goes down if you split out the satellites of the NMI). However both the Chair and the Director of the Arts Council are women, the Council itself is 50/50, and its staff is overwhelmingly female. Added to this, my experience with the MA programme and folks in positions at lower and mid-managerial levels in the arts management sector is that they are also overwhelmingly female.

What does this tell us? Anything? Nothing? What is the relationship between gender and compensation, and does that change whether we’re talking about non-state organisations or government/civil sector posts? Have women in more senior positions within arts and culture experienced a ‘glass ceiling’, or is there a generational shift waiting to happen? Should we be worried about the shrinking number of men entering arts management as a profession? In the art historical sphere there’s lots of activity at the moment focused on re-establishing women within Irish art history and visual culture (see an upcoming conference at TRIARC and also a recent book edited by UCD Postdoc Dr Karen Brown)– however I don’t know of any current research focused on cultural management or more contemporary sociological takes on the Irish arts sector (any suggestions welcome!) The term ‘feminism’ continues to provoke strong negative reactions amongst undergraduates, both male and female, in my experience at UCD– so whilst some of the Guerrilla Girls’ actions might seem a little tame (or outdated?), I have found their performances a good starting point for discussion in some undergraduate classes– I don’t think there’s a convincing argument for hanging up the gorrilla masks just yet!

New Arts Council Logos?

OK, this is my last post of the day… but has anyone else noticed the new Arts Council funding logos? I only picked up on them in papers from over the weekend:

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ac_fund_artoffilm

ac_fund_circus

Ack, a designer’s nightmare. I can see why they might want to specify the funding streams, but the simple square logo was so much more elegant and less obtrusive. Although perhaps that’s the point…