RHA and St. Patrick’s Festival are delighted to present a major exhibition EAMONN DOYLE in association with Fundación Mapfre.
Over the past five years, Eamonn Doyle rapidly emerged into the contemporary photographic world with his “Dublin trilogy” — extracts from which were self-published as three acclaimed books; i, ON and End. — and most recently with his new series, K, which he photographed in the west of Ireland and southern Spain. This exhibition at the RHA presents a broad selection of Doyle’s work-to-date in his home town for the first time.
When Doyle’s work is staged together as a whole, its collective dynamic and sensory drama becomes truly apparent, resonating with music, cinema and theatre. In turn the work manages to break with traditions of photography whilst simultaneously becoming a new eye at the center of the evolution of those traditions.
Doyle studied photography in Dublin, 1987–1991, and though he continued to take photographs for a short period of time after that, it was only when he put down his camera and started to produce and publish music, specifically a unique and influential genre of Dublin-based electronic music, that he began to find his voice. When he picked up a camera again, 20 years after putting it down, he did not go back to where he left off, his camera became another method to continue working with a kind of music, honing in on a beat, on the “movement of people”. When he stepped out on to the street that day, camera in hand, it was as if, all this time, he had been setting the stage upon which he would then make his photographic “recordings”.
This exhibition also sees the launch of Made in Dublin, published by Thames & Hudson, which brings together the Dublin trilogy plus new and unpublished photographs as one in an exhilarating, cinematic book featuring specially written text vignettes by prize-winning author Kevin Barry.
The exhibition will continue to Fundación Mapfre, Madrid, September 2019.
Public Event
2 April, 11am & 12.30pm: Tour for the Visually Impaired
3 April, 5.30pm: Panel Discussion, Eamonn Doyle, Kevin Barry, Niall Sweeney, Chair: Trish Brennan