Comfort Ye My People: Alannah Robins

8 Sept – 8 October 2023

A truly immersive experience, ‘Comfort Ye My People’ is an intimate reflection on geological time, on our place in the natural world, and a visual journey through landscapes.

Comfort Ye My People’ is a meditation on our relationship with nature, a love letter to the land. It is about time and water. In this exhibition the artist explored the intricate relationship between humanity and the natural world. Through a combination of drawings, etchings and kinetic light, she invited audiences into a space which touches on both grief and celebration.

“I had other plans for this exhibition, but I felt an overwhelming compulsion to simply draw the mountains. I think it might be somehow related to our need for comfort and security when living in a state of chaos, such as the climate crisis in which we find ourselves. The process of drawing, then, involves giving a great level of attention to the subject, so that it becomes increasingly familiar. You become more and more sensitised to that which you are drawing, which leads to a greater intimacy with that subject or space, in this case, for me, the inhabited landscape.

“My studio overlooks the Derryclare Mountain and my commute to work is through the beautiful Inagh valley in the heart of Connemara. In this work, which traces visualised tidal rises, I aim to draw our attention away from overwhelming and paralysing climate anxiety to geological time, to a sense that the mountains will be ok. Needless to say, images of the tides rising over our beloved and familiar landscapes raise fears of our homes underwater, but they also nudge us to an awareness of a different pace of time.

“I was really moved by Andri Snær Magnason ‘s beautiful book On Time and Water in which he interweaves the micro details of human familial relationships with the grand scope of glacial time. He invites us to imagine the extent of our own love for our own kin in time. What will be the year when your daughter’s granddaughter is 94 years old? What will the world be like then? Do you grieve for that world, or do you celebrate it?”

The gently engaging work of Alannah Robins created a space for contemplation and conversation. An activist and singer as well as a visual artist, she brings her unique vision to the forefront in ‘Comfort Ye My People’, encouraging us all to consider our relationship with our environment, with the land.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Artistic director of Interface Alannah Robins is a graduate of the NCAD and has an interdisciplinary artistic practice. She has won several commissions and awards for her artwork, including a public commission for the Waterford Institute of Technology, Tyresö Kulturstipendium and Helge Axe:son stipend. Recent exhibitions include Behold, Altan Klamovka, Prague 2022; Spirit, Oblastni Galleri Liberec 2021; Carrying the Songs, Detroit Stockholm; The Half Light, Pasaj, Istanbul 2016 and Bach in the Water, with Cecilia Josefson, Galleri CC, Malmö (all 2016), also Púca in the Machine, Mermaid Arts Centre, Bray 2022; the Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, London’s Dialogue Cultural Space and in Sweden, in Tegen2, Detroit Stockholm and Kiruna Stadshus. Her work is found in collections including the Museum of European Art, Oblastni Galleri Liberec, Czech Republic. She is the founder and director of Interface residency and studio.