The RDS Visual Art Awards are set to return in 2024, showcasing the best of visual art graduates in Ireland.
With a prize fund of over €40,000, the RDS Visual Art Awards provide a curated exhibition opportunity for emerging visual artists. The 2024 exhibition will take place at the RHA Gallery from November 22 to January 18.
Among the talented artists included in this year’s exhibition are queer creators Stell De Burca, Cahal O’Connell and Ava Lowry, who spoke to GCN about their work and what it means to be part of this exhibition.
Stell De Burca
Stell De Burca is a trans, non-binary artist who uses traditional oil painting alongside comic book/storyboarding elements to follow a trans character. Through their art, they share an intimate and personal encounter of their navigation through normal everyday tasks that become complicated by their inability to conform to conventional gender roles.
“My art focuses on the more overlooked and subtle aspects of the trans experience,” they said to GCN. “The details that are woven into everyday life, more specifically, as featured in this series, the process of getting ready in the morning.”
What they want to achieve through their art is “to normalise the trans experience and make it a more approachable topic of conversation for people by taking them through my everyday experience.”
They continued saying, “By making my art about my trans experience I let people in on that part of my life, which meant that I could be myself at college, because everyone was right there with me watching my work unfold in the studio. It gave me the courage to come out to all my lecturers who were so unbelievably supportive and encouraging”
Speaking about what it means for them to be part of the 2024 RDS Awards exhibition, the artist said: “I was overjoyed that not only was my art well received, but that it was given such an amazing and prestigious opportunity to be seen and shared with more people.”
“A part of my life that I had once kept hidden from other people was suddenly being fully embraced and celebrated,” they added. “What did it mean to me? It meant the absolute world.”
Cahal O’Connell or Miss Mary Jane
Born in Derry, Cahal O’Connell is a visual artist, musician and cabaret performer whose art explores the intersection of identity, gender, sexuality and visual iconography.
He explained, “My art focus’ on utilising my drag alias, Miss Mary Jane, as a living artistic vessel, through which to carry out my performance work, which is often captured and immortalised through secondary lens based media.”
Reflecting on his art, he said: “I started my career as a musician and drag artist when I was 16 years old, playing tiny cabaret shows in a little jazz bar in Derry, where I’m from. Had anyone told me back then that after the struggles, both creative and personal throughout the years, that such an art form would propel me to a level of opportunity such as this is one – it’s been one the most validating experiences I’ve had as a working visual and musical artist.”
Speaking about work he submitted for the 2024 RDS Awards, he recalled being “intrigued by the mystique and glamorous, public facing facade of the Playboy Empire, beginning with exploring its role within the sexual revolution of the 1960s.”
The artist then created the pieces for the exhibition “by transplanting the iconic silhouette of the Playboy Bunny into the contemporary Northern Irish culture of 2023. Over the development of the project this theme began to sink in and became a lot more personally entwined as I crafted this new ‘Bunny Girl’ alter ego, inspiring me to align my musical practice with the project and pushing into further production and development.”
Ava Lowry
Ava Lowry is a visual artist who works with combined media, focusing primarily on watercolour and oil paint on canvas. Through her work, Ava explores themes related to the human body, intimacy and physicality within relationships and the self, and the interplay between the corporeal body and the concept of ‘home’, creating an overarching sense of intimacy.
For more information on the 2024 RDS Visual Art Awards, visit the website here.
© 2024 GCN (Gay Community News). All rights reserved.
This post is sponsored by RDS Visual Art Awards
Support GCN
GCN has been a vital, free-of-charge information service for Ireland’s LGBTQ+ community since 1988.
During this global COVID pandemic, we like many other organisations have been impacted greatly in the way we can do business and produce. This means a temporary pause to our print publication and live events and so now more than ever we need your help to continue providing this community resource digitally.
GCN is a registered charity with a not-for-profit business model and we need your support. If you value having an independent LGBTQ+ media in Ireland, you can help from as little as €1.99 per month. Support Ireland’s free, independent LGBTQ+ media.
comments. Please sign in to comment.