I’ve been on an Irish culture kick over the last month: first the film Kneecap, then Juno and the Paycock with Mark Rylance and then Arán & Im, a performance in which Manchán Magan talked about the origins of Irish words while making sourdough bread (very tasty). Magan is the author of Thirty-Two Words for Field: Lost Words of the Irish Landscape so there was a lot that evening of relevance to this blog. However, I’m going to focus here instead on my fourth Irish cultural event, a trip today to Matt’s Gallery to see Remnant, Willie Doherty’s new exhibition of black and white photographs and video footage. There were foggy woods (see below), dead leaves and branches, empty streets, blank walls, peeling paint, stains, graffiti, broken bricks and roadside puddles. The videos (shot in Derry, Donegal and by the River Boyne) also showed a moon seen through bare black boughs, a stretch of fast flowing water, rocks slowly dripping and flat waves covering and uncovering a small stretch of sand.
I’ve not really kept up closely with Willie Doherty’s work since discovering it many years ago when I first got into Hamish Fulton and Richard Long, who were also combining landscape photography with text. The curators note that images like the one I’ve included above resemble his early work, but instead of having text imprinted on them – words like ‘undercover’, ‘shifting ground’ or ‘the other side’ drawing links to recent political history – Doherty installs them here alongside three videos that contain relatively little movement and words read aloud by Stephen Rea. In the course of this monologue he says things like “fear trapped in the gaps where men and women were displaced” and “the living and the dead side by side” and “all traces lost in the sand, absorbed into the sea”. It is all pretty gloomy, but Rea’s quiet voice made me want to keep listening.
The gallery has copies of an interview Doherty did with Tim Dixon and I’ll end here by quoting something interesting in this about the woods he photographed.
These forests which sprung up all along the border, [are] usually in places where the land is not really of any great agricultural value. These forests were planted, I don’t know when they started really, probably sometime in the seventies and eighties.
And they’re kind of horrendous because they’re just very generic pine forests, which are planted in rows and not really maintained or looked after very well, so they become a bit of an eyesore really.
But significantly, at least one of the people who was assassinated and then buried by the IRA in the early seventies, one of
‘the disappeared’, Columba McVeigh, whose body has never been recovered, was buried in a remote border area somewhere between a bog and one of these forests. So it has a significance in that respect, and the first section of one of the strands of dialogue in the work refers to a figure who’s dead—a kind of ghost who talks about being in the wrong place at the wrong time.