Commune – Group Exhibition

Commune
Group Exhibition
1 December 2022 – 20 January 2023
Launch from 5pm – 8pm

Join us on Thursday the 1st of December 2022 for Late Night Art for an evening of cultural celebration, community and to mark our final exhibition of 2022. Commune brings together a selection of new work by artists commissioned by the University of Atypical’s D/deaf Disabled Artists Support Fund during the Covid pandemic in 2021.

This multidisciplinary exhibition reflects the dynamic practices of artists from the region who identify as D/deaf, disabled and neurodiverse showcasing their creativity and contribution to our cultural landscape. The DDASF Award was funded by the Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the Department for Communities.

Commune features work by Jacqueline Holt, Sinéad O’Donnell, Sinead O’Neill Nichol, Paul Moore, Alexandra McCalmont, Joel Simon, Dara Condon, Alice Burns, Ita Watson, Vikkie Patterson, Johanna Leech, Billy Woods, Benen Dillon, Jacqueline Wylie, Shiro Masuyama, Jamie Baker, Adam Elder-Mullan, Ciaran Magill and Emma Campbell.

Please note we will be closed for the festive season from the 20th of December 2022 until the 5th of January 2022 inclusive.

Visit Us – Atypical Gallery
University of Atypical
109 – 113 Royal Avenue, Belfast, BT1 1FF
Northern Ireland

Gallery – Open
Tuesday – Friday
11am – 5.30pm

Call Us
t: 02890239450

Visit Us – Online
w: universityofatypical.org

Access Information
Ground floor & level. Loop system. Accessible shower toilet. Height adjustable sink. Hoist & changing bench. Audio described tours. Braille. Onsite defibrillator. Period products.
Sanitizer units and a warm welcome!
See you soon.

Image: Courtesy of the artist Paul Moore, Video still from A man walk into a room (2021)

Images of Incoming

The Images of Incoming exhibition is the result of a project which engaged with some 50 women from Northern Ireland and Canada. The Northern Ireland -Canadian project emerged from an initial partnership between Queen’s University Belfast’s Open Learning (Adult Education) Programme and the British Columbia’s Adult Education Department of University of Fraser Valley. The University of Atypical for Arts and Disability, Northern Ireland’s lead organisation on arts and disability, later joined the partnership to curate an exhibition of photographs from participants, facilitate the creation of an accessible website and make a documentary film – recognising the importance of accessible dissemination and impact.

The project participants were women from a wide range of backgrounds and cultures, from Africa to China to India and Pakistan, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Kosovo, Spain, Kurdistan, East Timor and Mauritius. The women took photographs to express their sense of exclusion and belonging in their new country and came together through a series of online workshops to discuss their images. The Northern Irish participants were able to gain Open Learning credits for their participation.

The rich insights of the project will help inform all those working with incomer people, including policy makers about what are the key issues and how they can be addressed.

The Queen’s University Belfast’s Open Learning (Adult Education) Department offers our thanks to everyone who contributed to the success of the Images of Incoming project and we are privileged that the participants have given so freely of their time and shared their experiences with us.

Professor Tess Maginess

Director, Queen’s University Belfast’s Open Learning (Adult Education) Programme

Dr Federica Ferrieri, Images of Incoming Project Co-ordinator

Queen’s University Belfast Open Learning Programme: The Open Learning Programme offers a wide range of adult education courses and research. The programme has three main strands: a large Humanities curriculum featuring daytime, evening, weekend and online courses meeting the needs of the community, a Continuing Professional Development Programme, delivered in partnership with voluntary and statutory organisations and an outreach projects programme focused on the Grand Challenges of our time, including migration and the wellbeing of older people, and developed in partnership with local, national and international partners.

University of Fraser Valley Adult Education Department: The University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) Adult Education Department offers a wide array of programs including a Bachelor’s Degree in Adult Education, a Workplace Education (WE) Associate certificate and an Integrated Learning Design Associate certificate. UFV Adult Education Department also offers a certificate in Teaching English as a Second Language. These programs prepare students to work in any setting where adult learning takes place. This includes formal classroom settings, non-formal and informal settings such as the workplace. A diverse group of students from all over Canada participate in UFV’s Adult Education programs.

University of Atypical for Arts and Disability: The University of Atypical for Arts and Disability (UofA) is the lead sectoral organisation for arts and disability in Northern Ireland and plays a key role in increasing opportunities for D/deaf, disabled and Neurodiverse artists and audiences. UofA delivers a sectoral development programme in equality, access and inclusion and showcases the work of d/Deaf, disabled and Neurodiverse artists through the Atypical Gallery, Bounce Arts festival, and the Ledger Studio for performing arts. Learning programmes include EU wide research partnerships, Digital Horizon an arts based digital innovation scheme and British Sign Language courses for art workers.

QUB, UFV and UofA offer our thanks to our funders:

Queen’s University Belfast: ESRC Impact Acceleration Account, Engaged Research Seed Fund & SDG Research Fund

University of Fraser Valley: Strategic Initiative Grant, Faculty/Student, Research and Scholarly Activity Fund & SSHRC Explore Grant

University of Atypical for Arts and Disability: Arts Council of Northern Ireland, Belfast City Council & Department for Communities

Workshop Exploring melody, music and Rhythm – Project Sparks

Come along and explore melody, movement and rhythm with Project Sparks’ exceptionally talented disabled/neurodivergent mentors. Every voice and ability will shine in this inclusive music workshop, as participants explore their creativity through drumming, singing, xylophones and other inclusive instruments. Everyone will leave wanting more music in their lives!

Since 2017, Project Sparks’ Leaders (who have lived-experience of autism, learning-disability, Down’s syndrome, cerebral palsy and spina bifida) have mentored children and young people from Catholic, Protestant, rural and minority-ethnic communities from across County Derry, which is an unprecedented achievement in our community.

Supported by the Public Health Agency in partnership with Derry City & Strabane District Council.

Booking Required

#whatsonderrystrabane #happydaysnorthwest

Video Real Artist: Group exhibition

The University of Atypical for Arts and Disability and our partners Fermanagh and Omagh District Council, offer the ‘Video Real’ online exhibition by. Members of Fermanagh & Omagh District Council’s Access Advisory Groups who have captured and compiled a selection of short videos highlighting the barriers they face on a daily basis. The films provide a snapshot of what it’s like to use services for people who are d/Deaf or use mobility scooters, as well as a collection of poems inspired by their disability.

Watch here: https://www.youtube.com/c/FermanaghOmaghDistrictCouncil

Get it out of you! – Paul Moore

Get it out of you! is a new live work by Paul Moore who is particularly intrigued by the body and landscape, nature and machine in relation to our internal and external experiences.

His recent work has been informed by Virtual Reality technology, questioning a space that doesn’t exist but is still restricted by real world physical barriers. This continuing struggle with the present and the search for both extreme reality and out of body experience marks a change in Moore’s practice towards a more contemplative question about how we as a society are equipped to deal with adversity. 

Paul Moore is an interdisciplinary artist currently based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He has exhibited exhibitions both locally, nationally, and internationally, including:  FIonnghlas, Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast (2021), Consideration Of All Bodies, Lab Gallery, Dublin (2021) and Revolution, Galveston Arts Centre, Texas U.S.A. (2014).

www.itspaulmoore.com

#itspaulmoore

My Place & Space – Group exhibition

The University of Atypical for Arts and Disability is delighted to work with our festival partners Fermanagh and Omagh District Council and Derry City & Strabane District Council, bringing new voices to Bounce 2022. 

This new open submission exhibition has been supported by the Public Health Agency and is an exhibition of photographs by d/Deaf, disabled and neurodiverse people responding to the theme of ‘My Place & Space’. Artists are invited to share photographs of a place or item that makes you feel happy or included within society.

Get Involved – Submissions are open to all ages from the pan-disability community within DCSDC & FODC areas. 

Submit your photographs by email to – disability@fermanaghomagh.com
or inclusion.culture@derrystrabane.com

Your email should include My Place & Space – Submission in the subject line. 

Deadline for submissions – Monday 26 September 2022, 5 pm

#What’s on Derry Strabane 
#Happy Days North West

This website uses cookies