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New exhibit ‘Housing for the People’ goes on display at National Museum of Ireland - Country Life

Anthony Haughey, artist-in-residence, and artists Caleb Daly and Luke Ryan; at the launch of 'Housing for the People', a new artwork. Image: John Mee Photography

A new temporary exhibit created in collaboration with community groups and inspired by the 19th century Land League movement has gone on display at the National Museum of Ireland - Country Life, Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo.

‘Housing for the People’ is a contemporary banner designed by artists Caleb Daly and Luke Ryan in collaboration with Anthony Haughey and Ballina Textiles Group.

It was created as part of Anthony Haughey’s collaborative and socially engaged residency at the National Museum of Ireland for the Decade of Centenaries programme.
 
The artwork was inspired by a Land League banner from Cullen, Co. Tipperary, which is on permanent display in the National Museum of Ireland - Country Life.
 
Mr Haughey has worked with more than 500 participants from communities across Ireland during the course of his residency from 2021 to 2024. ‘Housing for the People’ is one of the outputs of that residency along with the major new exhibition we make our own histories, which runs until June 2024 at the National Museum of Ireland - Decorative Arts & History, Collins Barracks, Dublin 7.
 
The main element of the ‘Housing for the People’ banner at Turlough Park is a central image of Eugène Delacroix’s La Liberté Guidant le People (1830), an artwork synonymous with justice for all marginalised people. In the banner, the female figure of 'liberty' is replaced by 'lustica' as she appears in Dublin Castle and the Four Courts, adding to the Irish context of the banner. 
 
It also features a portrait of Michael Davitt, the co-founder of the National Irish Land League from Straide in Co. Mayo, and a portrait of social activist and advocate for homeless people, Fr. Peter McVerry.

This banner represents a historical continuum of more than a century of struggle against inequality in Ireland,” said Mr Haughey. “It continues a long tradition of activist banner-making, designed to be carried at political rallies and demonstrations. The artwork is part of a larger body of work I co-created with communities through a series of workshops with hundreds of individuals and engagement with diverse audiences across the four sites of the National Museum of Ireland.”

 
Welcoming the unveiling of the new artwork, Clodagh Doyle, Keeper of the Irish Folklife Collection at the National Museum of Ireland - Country Life said:
 

“It has been exciting to see how Anthony engaged with so many different communities and individuals and with the Collections of the National Museum of Ireland and how they relate to the Decade of Centenaries. The resulting artworks and installations, including this ‘Housing for the People’ banner, offer us new ways in which to consider our Collections through contemporary themes and understandings – reinterpreting objects in the context of our experiences today.”

 
‘Housing for the People’ is on display now on Level B of the exhibition galleries at the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life.
 
we make our own histories is on display until June 2024 at the National Museum of Ireland – Decorative Arts & Histories, Collins Barracks, Dublin 7.

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