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Artist Insights: Bryony Dunne | TULCA 2024

  • Printworks Gallery 15 Market Street Galway H91 TCX3 (map)

Artist Insights: Bryony Dunne | TULCA 2024

Artist Insights is a series of short interviews with artists featured in TULCA Festival of Visual Arts. The series offers a deeper look into the work of the participating artists, exploring their creative processes, motivations, and themes behind their work. Presented across multiple galleries in Galway city, the series provides a reflective perspective on the role of contemporary art in the cultural landscape, highlighting the diverse voices that contribute to this annual festival in the west of Ireland.

Bryony Dunne
Bryony Dunne’s recent films and sculptures act as complex mediations on man’s conquest of nature and desire for domination and superiority. Her 2022 feature film, Surrender Your Horns, considers the true story of the smuggling of rhino horns, stolen from Irish and British museums, to be ground down for traditional Eastern medicine and consumed to supposedly enhance masculine virility. In Dunne’s hands, a man undergoes a Kafkaesque metamorphosis into a rhino- headed man, and documentary footage merges with Theatre of the Absurd-style performance.

Her new sculptures, collectively entitled Drifting, were realised during a residency at the European Ceramic Workcentre (EKWC) in The Netherlands in late 2023. Emerging from Topographia Hibernica – an account of the plentiful flora, fauna and barbaric people of Ireland, produced in the year 1188, soon after the Anglo-Norman invasion – a narrative begins to unravel. With the medieval desire to explain everything as a unified system, descriptions in the book believed that the barnacle goose, a bird, was born from the goose barnacle, a crustacean. Both species have visual similarities: the mouth of the crustacean opening and closing could be imagined as a bird’s beak looking for food. Dunne’s sculptures reimagine this correlation, while also transposing this story into a further appearance of goose barnacles. In 2015, thousands of these crustaceans attached themselves onto Elon Musk’s failed SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, as seen when it was recovered from the sea off Cornwall.


Documentation: Laura Griffin