Friday, 3 July 2026

Members & Friends Exhibition 2026: Meet the Artist - Lynda O' Donoghue

 


Introduction

Lynda O' Donoghue has submitted a watercolour piece titled "Fastnet Lighthouse" after one of West Cork's most iconic maritime landmarks. She has provided further insight into her methodology and personal connection with the lighthouse.


Interview with Lynda O' Donoghue

1. What inspired your submission for this year's "Members and Friends" Exhibition, and were there any particular people, places, experiences or events that influenced it?

This watercolour was inspired by a boat trip I took around the Fastnet Lighthouse last year. Being able to see it from every angle and taking photographs of it up close gave me a completely new appreciation of this iconic landmark. The experience stayed with me long after the trip, and I wanted to capture not only the lighthouse itself but also the sense of isolation, strength and permanence it conveys. As a West Cork native, I am continually inspired by our coastline and the stories connected to it. The Fastest felt like a natural subject for my first submission to the Members and Friends Exhibition.


2. What led you to choose the medium used for your work? How did it help you express your ideas?

Watercolour was my preferred medium for this painting because of its ability to create atmosphere and subtle transitions of light. Watercolour keeps the sky and sea soft while allowing the physical presence  of the lighthouse to stand strong.  


3. What do you hope viewers take away from your work? Whether emotionally, intellectually or otherwise.

I hope viewers are drawn into the quiet drama of the scene and take a moment to reflect on the resilience of the lighthouse & its place in our maritime heritage. On a personal level, I hope the painting evokes a sense of calm and wonderful, reminding people of the beauty and power of the natural world that surrounds us here in West Cork.


4. Did your original vision for this piece change during its creation? If so, how and why?

Yes, it evolved as the painting developed, I intended to create an accurate representation based on my photographs. However, as I worked I became interested in conveying atmosphere and mood trying to capture the Fastnet in the weather conditions.

5. Is your work based on any particular location in West Cork?

 The Fastnet Lighthouse is one of Ireland’s most recognisable landmarks. For me, seeing it from the sea during the boat trip brought its scale and significance to life in a way photographs alone never could. It represents resilience, guidance and endurance against the elements. I find these qualities inspiring, and painting it was my way of celebrating a structure that means so much to the history and identity of this region.

Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Members & Friends Exhibition 2026: Meet the Artist - Micheál O' Connell

 

Introduction

Micheál O' Connell, also known by his online alias "Mocksim", has submitted a very avant-garde piece for this year's exhibition. This is a submission which encompasses the gallery unlike every other: "Nothing".


Interview with Micheál O' Connell

1. What inspired your submission for this year's "Members and Friends" Exhibition, and were there any particular people, places, experiences or events that influenced it?

There was no theme this year. If there had been, that would have been a factor. But there wasn't. I'm not that interested in everyday presumptions about what constitutes art. For the most part the word conjures up the expectation of rectangular things hung on walls, these being unlikely pictures based on some virtual reality often, and making use of a limited, proscribed, set of materials, and they are often framed.

Ordinary ideas about the importance of craft - once again usually taken to mean a preordained and very limited set of activities - can irritate too. These are hardly radical gestures to be making here. Think of Victor Burgen's famous words from back in the 1970s about painting as 'the anachronistic daubing of woven fabrics with coloured mud' and something more about so called sculpture, come to mind.

We are well into the 21st century now and highly industrialised technological society, factory production, began emerging a few hundred years ago. Long before AI, artists recognised that particular kinds of skills had been undermined, but replaced by other ways of engaging with an ever-changing situation. Selection, and decision making are very important. Picking something out. And maybe 'thinking' is important to defend. I'm fond of Hannah Arendt.


2. What led you to choose the medium used for your work? How did it help you express your ideas?

As a child, my friend Frank O'Keefe and I were committed to doing things the difficult way, rather than the easy way. For example we would walk along the rock by Myrtleville and Fountainstown but choose the more challenging route up steep parts and so on. No following the line of least resistance can be valuable in life, and politically, I later realised.

Anyway for the purposes here I want to do something more difficult than simply submit another rectangle. I wanted to avoid the suggestion that visual is important - though visual is unavoidable too. Wheeling Duchamp in here again, who long ago dismissed this fixation on the retinal, as if artists were people with bigger better eyes or something.

I'll admit that more could have been done to hone and perfect this piece. There are some flaws in how I described the work, some inconsistencies, and given that the description is so important to the work - some would argue all that it is - that's an issue.

  

3. What do you hope viewers take away from your work? Whether emotionally, intellectually or otherwise.

I have no hopes for viewers to be honest. More precisely it depends on who they are. They are not viewers anyway because there is, arguably, nothing to view. It's quite a boring and unoriginal work in one sense. I wait to see. It tickled me but now I see some flaws.

I'd give it 65% out of 100 if I were marking it. Not bad, a good B grade. Perhaps viewers could assess the works?


4. Did your original vision for this piece change during its creation? If so, how and why?

Yes, because the volume of the holding space is always different. The piece therefore has a different volume and mass here. I modified the description slightly too I think. The original work was shown 6 years ago in fact. Here's a documentary pic with description: https://www.flickr.com/photos/68898173@N05/49399396547/in/album-72157712711008063/


5. What do you wish people asked you more about your work?

 I don't really have any wishes. It might vary though. Re one piece in a show there in 2022, called Car Parked, an upside-down Toyota Yaris, a passer by asked, 'C'meeer, it that car or is it art?' The question took me by surprise and I quickly answered, 'It's both'. They were visibly delighted with the response, and the idea that something could be two things at once.

Friday, 26 June 2026

Members & Friends Exhibition 2026: Meet the Artist - Roger Horgan


Introduction

Roger Horgan is another artist featured for this years exhibition, with a surreal acrylic on canvas painting titled "West Cork Imagined #1". Here, Roger gives us a deep insight into his methodology.


Interview with Roger Horgan

1. What inspired your submission for this year's "Members and Friends" Exhibition, and were there any particular people, places, experiences or events that influenced it?

The landscape of West Cork is a huge inspiration for me and it has grown more so since I took up kayaking.  The view of the land from the sea in a boat which is so low in the water gives a different perspective which energizes my brain.


2. What led you to choose the medium used for your work? How did it help you express your ideas?

Years of working in a commercial environment means that I’m equally adept with expressing my vision digitally.  This means that I can develop my sketches and colour palettes digitally, before translating these onto canvas using acrylics.  The speed with which acrylics dry means I can work at speed and any changes can be made at the right time.  


3. What do you hope viewers take away from your work? Whether emotionally, intellectually or otherwise.

I’m hoping to share some of the wonder, joy and good fortune I feel to live in such an inspiring area.  Subject matter is everything.


4. Did your original vision for this piece change during its creation? If so, how and why?

The fact that my work is not strictly based on specific references means I have the freedom to make the image look and feel the way I want and this gives me the flexibility to change aspects of the image as I work.  In the current painting, the overall composition didn’t change much from the concept stage but the colours evolved a lot while I worked on the canvas.


5. Is your work based on any particular location in West Cork?

Generally my work is not based on any one place, more created from my memories of places and atmospheres that affected or stayed with me from being there.  This submission was initially inspired by an old boat in Clonakilty harbour, though the rest of the painting is clearly somewhere else!

Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Members & Friends Exhibition 2026: Meet the Artist - Marie Bryan

 

Introduction

Marie Bryan is one of the many featured artists for this years exhibition, having submitted a fabricated metal sculpture titled "Draoi Buí Draoi Cróga Draoi Scéil: Solar Alien". During this interview, Marie shares deep insight into the process and philosophy behind it.

Interview with Marie Bryan

1. What inspired your submission for this year's "Members and Friends" Exhibition, and were there any particular people, places, experiences or events that influenced it?

I am always intrigued that there seems to be no alien life in other star systems, because no liquid water has been observed out there. I wanted to invent an alien who was decidedly fictional and also quite friendly, so I proposed a Solar Alien, beaming yellow. Draoi Buí Draoi Cróga Draoi Scéil: Solar Alien is both sunspark and sun God, and most omniscient. I have been doing space art projects, and loving the work. I really enjoyed exhibiting at MTU Blackrock Castle Observatory and at Spacefest 2025 last year. There is quite a buzz to meeting scientists, researchers and writers through this interdisciplinary pursuit.

2. What led you to choose the medium used for your work? How did it help you express your ideas?

This steel fabrication was an ATU Galway sculpture brief called Geometric Solids, where we were to learn about working with steel. I began by constructing a pentagonal dodecahedron with the help of the sculpture lecturer, Ger Leslie. Steel inspired the formidable. It inspired strength and strength of spirit.

Also, I have a background in painting, and I became fixated on finding a warm yellow. This took several sessions of spraying. I wanted my strong steel piece to have approachability.


3. What do you hope viewers take away from your work? Whether emotionally, intellectually or otherwise.

I was aiming for alien, and I guess this looks like something new to viewers. I would like to think that there is more for us, and I would like to inspire this hope in others. Life can be wearying, and we need positive surprises for reinvigoration and inspiration. 

I would like that viewers see the fun in the disarming yellow, spikey angular steel fabrication, a unique contradiction in terms. I would like it to put a positive yellow emoji on viewers' subconscious.


4. Did your original vision for this piece change during its creation? If so, how and why?

My original drawings were of a star with crooked starlight. The idea of bending time fascinates me.  My proposed piece, with twelve pentagonal bending spikes, was both ginormous and needing a lot of worktime. It was scaled back to this, with just one spike coming from the dodecahedron, and just the first part of that spike built solid. I was happy to pick up the slack, by including narrative with further potential, in ogham inscriptions, and by developing that narrative further in the film module of the course. Our film lecturer, Louise Manifold, emphasized story boarding. 


5. Is your sculpture thematically intertwined with your other works?

The resultant film, Meet Me on a Rock, is an intense two and a half minutes of new religion.  It tends to be either not noticed, or watched several times. Draoi Buí Draoi Cróga Draoi Scéil: Solar Alien gets to tell his story, and as he narrates, he compels the actress to do his bidding, to attain the party to end all parties: paradise with Armageddon. I edited sound to find a cute alien voice, which I found irresistible: you couldn’t but follow him!  Also in the film is another sculpture, a rocket filled with yellow balloons, which I am instructed to launch, west of Galway. With no engine in the rocket, my determined endeavors are laughable. Comic performance is a major part of my artistic expression.

Saturday, 20 June 2026

Members & Friends Exhibition 2026


Cora Collins - "A Good Day Coming"


Exhibition: Past & Present


West Cork Arts Centre was founded in 1985 by a group of artists and community members, who held an exhibition in Skibbereen for the Welcome Home Festival. This exhibition has now become the 'Members and Friends Exhibition - a staple annual showcasing works, to showcase works from local artists in West Cork in all stages of their career. The exhibition houses a diverse range of works ranging from oil paints, charcoal, photography pieces to sculptures and much more. The exhibition aims to celebrate the achievements of our local artists and the importance of the arts in our region.

The exhibition provides an open platform for local talent to express their creative process to the general public. Whether you attend to buy a painting for your wall or admire the works on display, you will always find something awe-inspiring.

This year, the Uillinn: West Cork Arts Centre will celebrate it's 42nd annual exhibition with a display of over 100 works from amatuer, student & professional artists. Two awards will also be handed out to two exhibiting artists. The first being the "Cnoc Buí Exhibition Award" which offers a solo exhibition opportunity at Cnoc Buí, Union Hall in 2027. The other is a "Sample-Studios Associate Membership" for 1 year. The latter of which provides support (e.g. professional facilities, training or mentorship, exhibition and residency opportunities) and sustains creative careers and practices in Cork.

Meeting the Artists

To celebrate 42 years of the "Members & Friends" Exhibition, I interviewed a diverse range of artists to uncover the methodology behind their submitted works. These interviews will be provided in upcoming posts here on the Uillinn: West Cork Arts Centre blog.

Over the next week I will gradually release these interviews, which include the following artists: Marie Bryan, Roger Horgan, Micheál O' Connell, Lynda O' Donoghue, Claire O' Mahony and Ibrahim Kimotho.

I'm Brian Walsh, an artist from Schull with a background in animation and motion graphics. I work part-time at the Uillinn as I always had an interest in visual storytelling or using art as a means of self-expression.

Friday, 27 March 2026

 The Peaceful Snake: How a Community Created a Living Artwork for St. Patrick’s Day 2026 in Skibbereen.

 



Every year, St. Patrick’s Day transforms towns and villages across Ireland into a kaleidoscope of green, gold, music, and laughter. Streets are filled with fiddles, parades, and the occasional rogue leprechaun. But this year, Uillinn: West Cork Arts Centre and the local community decided to up the ante. They asked themselves: what if, instead of just watching the parade, the town became part of it?

That project became The Peaceful Snake, a large-scale community art installation that brought together people of different ages, cultures, and creative backgrounds. By the time St. Patrick’s Day arrived, the snake had become far more than a sculpture—it had become a symbol of diversity, inclusion, and the powerful connections that emerge when a community creates something together.

The Vision Behind the Peaceful Snake

The question that started it all was deceptively simple: “What kind of artwork could truly represent a community?”

The answer: something that moves, something that transforms, and something that might make you laugh if it suddenly flopped over mid-parade. Inspired by traditional Chinese ceremonial snake dances—but with an Irish twist—the snake was envisioned as a contemporary, community-powered marvel.

In many cultures, snakes symbolise transformation, resilience, renewal, and balance. Here, the snake shed its stereotypical slimy and scary image and became a peaceful emblem of harmony and collective strength.

Unlike a single artist’s art piece, this snake had many hands behind it, each adding its own quirks and colours. It would not just hang around in a gallery—it would move, ripple, and interact with the streets and people, alive in every sense.

A Project Rooted in Diversity, Inclusion, and Laughter

At its heart, The Peaceful Snake was about community. Workshops welcomed participants of all ages, languages, and artistic skill levels. Some people had never touched paintbrushes since primary school; others had perfected the art of abstract finger painting at home. Everyone was encouraged to bring curiosity, humour, and a willingness to embrace PVA glue sticky fingers.

The workshops became spaces of collaboration, conversation, and laughter. One moment, a 10-year-old was painting a scale; the next, he was arguing passionately that snakes have souls and deserve our handprints. The result? A patchwork of creativity, colour, and community spirit.

I never thought I’d be part of a giant snake parade, laughed Elisabeth, a parent, who recently relocate to West Cork from Belgium I came to Art Centre to check it out, and now, I’m basically a snake expert.

 Creative Journey

The project officially started in January. Meetings were held, materials were gathered, and word spread like wildfire—or at least like a well-timed Facebook and Instagram post. Everyone was invited to join. The goal was simple: if you wanted to be part of a living artwork, you could. No strings attached.

The creation of The Peaceful Snake unfolded gradually over two months, transforming from an idea into a vibrant reality.

Design Workshops

In the early creative sessions, participants explored the snake’s symbolism: peace, unity, cultural diversity, and how many shades of green can we actually fit on one segment? Large sheets of paper became a riot of sketches, doodles, and surprisingly convincing technical drawings.

I suggested a segment with realistic scales all over it, and someone else suggested painted scales in the shape of hearts, and another one suggested adding googly eyes, giggled one of the adult participants. Somehow, it all worked. The snake has personality now, she added.

Colours were chosen collectively: bright greens, deep blues, occasional yellow splashes and glitter (because why not?), and every segment had its own identity while contributing to the snake’s overall flow.

Creation Workshops

Once designs were finalised, the real magic—and glue—began. Newspaper, glue, paint, chicken wire and cardboard structures filled tables as participants built the snake, segment by segment. Some focused on strength and stability (so the snake wouldn’t collapse mid-parade). Others painted intricate patterns or created wearable snake headpieces.

The atmosphere was lively and collaborative.

Every time when I’m passing through the workspace I can feel and hear fantastic energy, recalled Jackie from Front of House.

By early March, the snake had grown into a vibrant, multi-sectioned artwork filled with colour, movement, and unmistakable community spirit.

Preparing for the Parade

As St. Patrick’s Day approached, rehearsals began. Carrying a giant snake in a coordinated way is harder than it sounds. (especially when we had to bring the snake downstairs from the workspace on level 2) There were trips, slips, and the occasional snake collapse, but mostly, there was laughter.

 It felt like dancing with a very large, very flexible friend, said Sylwia, the Leading artist. And no one judged my questionable coordination.

Oh, Lodrie -how we get that monster down the
stairs,
laughed Mark, a visual artist.

The Day the Snake Came to Life - Dancing Through the Drizzle.

 Parade day arrived.  Skibbereen didn’t let a bit of drizzle dampen the St. Patrick’s Day spirit; if anything, the soft rain only made the colours brighter and the smiles bigger.

 Streets were lined with banners, music, and green everywhere. And then… The Peaceful Snake appeared.

The colourful sculpture slithered through the parade route. Children with headpieces jingled bells and chanted along, while adults guided the snake’s flowing segments. The audience didn’t just see an artwork—they witnessed a living symbol of collective effort, creativity, and good-natured chaos.

Despite the weather, the group which created the snake showed up with joy and determination, carrying the giant creature through the streets with pride. The crowd reaction, the cheers, the claps, the laughter, and the delighted pointing from children made every drop of rain worth it.

I felt like a tiny part of something enormous, said the parent of a child participant, and it was magical… and slightly terrifying because the snake is heavy, but magical mostly.

Why the Project Mattered

Beyond its visual impact, The Peaceful Snake created a shared experience, was visually striking, but its deeper value lay in the experience it created.

By drawing inspiration from multiple cultural traditions, the project demonstrated how art can bridge cultures and celebrate shared creativity.

For many participants—especially young people—contributing to a public artwork fostered confidence and pride. Seeing their work in the parade made them feel recognised and valued.

It reminded everyone that art can be messy, funny, and joyful – and that’s exactly how it should be!

Perhaps most importantly, the project created new relationships. People who might never have met discovered common ground through creativity, and Art became a language everyone could share.

“ It’s funny; it is sticky (PVA glue). It's fabulous," said Ruthann, a volunteer from The Leap Scarecrow Festival Team.

The Team Behind the Project

The project was led by artist Sylwia Migdal, who worked as both Lead Artist and Project Assistant. From the beginning, her vision was to create something open and welcoming — a space where people of all ages could come together, share ideas, and take part in making something exciting as a community.

The project grew thanks to the support of Uillinn’s team.

 Justine Foster, Programme Manager, and Ann Davoren encouraged Sylwia to bring her idea to life and share it with the local community. Stephen Canty generously opened the doors to his technical room, allowing us to borrow tools and materials to help build the snake.

During the parade, Louise Forshyt made sure everyone stayed safe and cared for, keeping spirits high with water, encouragement, and plenty of positive energy. The Front of House team - Colin, Jackie, and Charlie - also played an important role, warmly guiding parents and children to the workshop space so they could join in the creative process.

Sylwia was joined by a wonderful group of volunteers and collaborators who helped shape the workshops: visual artist Mark Beatty, Maeve and Ruadh Bancroft from West Cork Campus – Cork College of FET, Ana Marie McCarthy, Uillinn’s Art Project Assistant, Elena Baranova, Uillinn’s Art Project Assistant, Ruthann Sheahan and Maureen O’Neill from The Leap Scarecrow Festival Team.

Most importantly, the project came alive through the participation of families, Skibbereen Community School students, and young people who brought their creativity, curiosity, and energy to the workshops. Together, what began as a simple idea slowly grew into a shared artistic journey — one built by many hands and filled with imagination, collaboration, and community spirit.

A Living Symbol of Community

By the end of the Parade, the Peaceful Snake had already achieved something extraordinary. It had reminded everyone that art doesn’t need a single creator. Sometimes, the most powerful creations emerge when many hands, minds, and laughs come together.

The snake may have slithered off the streets, but it left a lasting impression: when a community comes together, differences become strengths, diversity becomes beauty, and laughter becomes part of the artwork.

Massive thanks to everyone who built, carried, and cheered for our giant snake. Days like this remind us why community matters. We turned a grey March afternoon into something bright, bold and unforgettable.

Honestly, said Sylwia I didn’t just join a parade—I joined a giant, collaborative adventure. And I survived. That’s a St. Patrick’s Day win.

Here’s to more moments like this where creativity leads the way and the whole community gets to celebrate it – said Ana Marie, Uillinn Art Project Assistant

HAPPY ST. PATRICK’S DAY!