Labour of Love at the Glucksman review: A funny, inventive, irrepressible exhibition about the meaning of care
Labour of Love: Economies of Care in Contemporary Art
Glucksman, Cork
★★★★☆
The concept of care has been brought into focus in contemporary
art
over the past five years by the Covid-19 pandemic. In his short book The Philosophy of Care, from 2022, the philosopher and art critic Boris Groys explained how philosophers through history have accounted for the concept, paying particular attention to Martin Heidegger's existential treatise Being and Time.
By understanding care as a cultivating mode of future-oriented engagement with one's world, Groys leads the reader to reassess the 20th century avant-garde, whose activity is reconceived as a 'reflection on and expansion of care'.
Though not explicitly referenced, the impact of Groys's philosophy is evident throughout Labour of Love: Economies of Care in Contemporary Art. This group show at the Glucksman, curated by Fiona Kearney and Katie O'Grady, features 12 Irish and international artists across two floors of the architecturally impressive Cork gallery.
Liesel Burisch's alluring
Minutes of Silence
sets the stage. A series of 15 silent vignettes involving protagonists standing still, this video work combines sincerity and tongue-in-cheek playfulness: we are transported from one unlikely venue for silence after another, including a school playground, a busy factory floor and a burlesque changing room. The tension between the utility of the space and the stillness and quiet of its inhabitants is arresting.
READ MORE
Minutes of Silence: from Liesel Burisch's alluring video work
Ill Communication: Dion Kitson's sculpture. Photograph: Tom Bird
A similar dynamic is at work in
Dion Kitson
's sculpture Ill Communication, featuring a telecoms engineer fixing a utility cabinet of fibre-optic wires. On first inspection I took this sculpture – its back to you, wearing a high-vis vest – to be a real-life technician in the gallery, realising my mistake only when I noticed the absence of movement.
[
Irish artist Michael Kane: 'Patrick Kavanagh did nothing else but create art. And that was my ideal'
Opens in new window
]
Laura Fitzgerald's work on the second floor exerts a strong influence, pulling everyone into its orbit. First is her The Visitors series of unusual comic-like panels, drawn with markers on cartridge paper. These works adopt a retro-video-game aesthetic – reminiscent of concept art for the Nintendo 64 – employing a Trojan-horse strategy to smuggle deeper emotional undertones in the guise of nostalgia.
A penetrating sense of melancholy, for instance, pervades works such as But I Do Still Care and More Weather, their waterlogged landscapes impregnated with loneliness and ruin, as spears of rain pierce the walls of farm buildings.
Fitzgerald
grew up on a mountainous farm in rural Co Kerry, an experience that forms the core of her artistic practice. But she does not rely on one expressive palette; rather, her work displays a great deal of range, evidenced in her second contribution to the Glucksman show, Rural Stress (Landini). A brilliantly inventive and funny installation, this work centres on a metal frame shaped to resemble a life-size tractor.
The sculpture is accompanied by an 'audio meditation' component that requires every participant to lie beneath the vehicle, listening to the wellness monologue that warns about the dangers of rural stress, which 'can leave you feeling full and bloated, with your hydraulic lift linkage feeling lethargic ... You might have dark thoughts about your differential lock.'
Labour of Love: Economies of Care in Contemporary Art is at the
Glucksman
, Cork, until Sunday, July 6th
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
2 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Family resource centre in Wexford makes history by hosting its first ever wedding
Linda Walsh and Steven Williams made history recently as the first couple to get married at one of the 121 family resource centres across Ireland. "I wanted something that was quite small and intimate and I love the room up in the resource centre. I approached Eimear and said 'can I get married here?', she thought I was mad at first, but then they helped me. It was a gorgeous little day. They were a huge help, they gave me access to the room and gave me little bits to do up the room. They couldn't have been any more helpful,' said Linda. Only a select few were at the intimate ceremony including Linda's father, Steve, three of their friends, Eimear, Pamela, the registrar and their two dogs dressed in tuxedos. After the ceremony they ventured down to Raspberry for food, before surprising their family at a party in Dun Laoghaire in Dublin. 'They thought they were coming to a surprise party for Steve but it was actually us surprising them for the wedding. "It was really relaxed and no pressure on anybody which is what I wanted. A registry office just wasn't my kind of vibe because I'm not very traditional anyway. Eimear and Pamela and the rest of the gang at the resource centre are absolutely amazing I have to say. I didn't tell family and friends because I didn't want anybody to be worried about having to buy new clothes or to stay in a hotel or worrying about presents because we don't need anything like that. Everyone was nice and relaxed and had a few drinks and a bit of a laugh when they realised. "We actually told them that Steve was getting his citizenship so when we arrived everyone was waving the Irish flag and somebody even bought him a flute, so they got a shock, it was great craic,' said Linda. As they'd been together for over 20 years, the wedding was a long time coming. Linda and Steve met purely by chance 21 years ago at a small pub in Dun Laoghaire. After around six months, Linda who is originally from Dublin followed Steve to Wales where they ran a pub together for a time. Around two years later, they decided to move back to Ireland and settled in Gorey in 2007. It was years before Linda eventually discovered Gorey Family Resource Centre when they moved to McDermott Street around two years ago. She says many of the friends she's met at the centre are like-minded people with similar interests. "The resource centre for me anyways, was a bit of a life-saver, it got me out of myself. I've met friends there that I'll have for life, I just think it's an amazing little place for the community. ADVERTISEMENT "One day I decided to pluck up the courage and just walk in, I think that's the hardest part is initially going and doing something. But once you walk in, the welcome that you get is just brilliant, absolutely brilliant,' said Linda. Speaking after the wedding, Community Development Worker, Pamela Keegan said, "We're the first ones to have ever hosted a wedding. Linda really wanted it here because of the connections she's made. "The centre is such an important part of her life, it's where she's made friends, she's connected with people and it really means a lot to her so we said we'd do what we can. We're quite proud to be the first family resource centre that's ever done it.'


Irish Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Johnny Marr: 'There was a purity about Rory Gallagher'
JOHNNY Marr has a new addition to his studio. 'I'm looking at a poster of him now that I got from Jill Furmanovsky about three weeks ago,' he says. 'I had it framed and put up in the studio. Rainbow Theatre, March, 1973. It's a sweet picture.' The him is Rory Gallagher. Blues virtuoso, check shirt wizard, prodigal son of Cork and Donegal, Ireland's first rock star and guitar hero to many around the world, including Smiths legend Marr. 'There was a purity about him without him being puritanical,' says Marr. 'There was more to him than just showbusiness. It was almost something religious. You knew there was a vocation there. 'People who were moved by his records or shows never really lose their affection for him. 'It's not about nostalgia, it's something to do with his integrity.' Gallagher died 30 years ago this month in London aged just 47. It's impossible to overstate his importance to Irish music. With Taste he lit the flame for every Irish band that followed. As a solo artist, he sold millions of albums, was labelled the best guitarist in the world and was courted by The Rolling Stones. Born in Ballyshannon and reared in Cork, Gallagher illuminated the North in the darkest days of the Troubles and had a huge following across Europe. There's a street near Paris named in his honour. But he was a reluctant superstar, adopting the romantic image of a lonesome gunslinger in washed-out denims, something that would eventually be part of his undoing. 'Live by the guitar die by the guitar sort of philosophy, which turned out to be quite prophetic,' says Marr. 'I was such a big fan of him as a teenager. Not only did I enjoy his music and loved his shows, but I kinda clocked him in a way of carrying yourself as a musician… 'To walk on stage and with no pretensions just blow the roof off the place. 'It's all very well doing that with lasers and banks of keyboards, but when you're doing it with a really beat-up old guitar and beat-up amps in jeans and sneakers, without all the bells and whistles, it's pretty powerful. 'The message he seemed to send out was, 'All you need in life is your guitar and maybe an amp and everything's alright'. 'As a young idealistic musician that was really alluring.' Marr himself has long been regarded as one of the greatest guitarists of his or any generation. Manchester-born to parents from Athy in Co Kildare, he is revered for his music with The Smiths, Electronic, The The, Modest Mouse, The Cribs, The Healers and Hans Zimmer, amongst others, as well as a hugely successful solo career. But it all began with Rory. 'My bedroom was a shrine to Rory at one time,' he says. 'When you're lucky enough to have those figures who influence you, people who make an impact on your life, they do tend to become part of your life story. 'Even my family were touched by it. My family, they knew his stuff because I used to play it so much as a kid. 'As a parent myself I know what that's like. It becomes a touchstone for your family.' Gallagher was famed for his raw energy shows in the 1970s. Marr was a dedicated disciple. As a teenager, he slept in train stations after going to see Gallagher play and walked home from Manchester city centre to the suburbs of Wythenshawe. 'And it being Manchester it was raining,' he laughs. 'But that was because I wanted to stay back and get an autograph after the show and he gave me a guitar pick.' Between 1971 and 1979 Gallagher released eight studio albums with a mixture of powerhouse and acoustic blues in a period of ferocious creativity. The music is hard-wired into Marr's soul. 'What you pick up in your formative years stays with you,' he says. 'I didn't quite realise it in the '80s because my head was on new agendas, but as you get older you identify things. 'I think What Difference Does It Make sounds like Secret Agent. Had I not learned how to play Secret Agent… The way it's played, it's a similar kind of thing. 'Also, Daughter of the Everglades, you can hear his influence on me. And Rory did have a song on his first album called There Is A Light.' On stage is where Gallagher came alive and his albums Live In Europe and Irish Tour '74 captured him at his most forceful with bassist Gerry McAvoy by his side. But his output and success declined in the 1980s and 1990s. Alcohol and prescription medication impacted his health and he was hospitalised in March 1995 for a liver transplant. He died three months later on June 14, 1995 after contracting an infection in hospital. 'He was living around the corner from me at that time,' says Marr. 'We'd kinda gotten to know each other a little bit before he passed away. 'I bumped into him a couple of times and he called me on the phone a couple of times. 'I was working on a The The session when I heard. It was just really sad.' Gary Moore, Adam Clayton, The Edge, Ronnie Drew and John Sheahan were among the mourners at the funeral in Cork. A telegram from Bob Dylan which arrived too late was read out in the church: 'Get well quick, with God's speed, and keep playing.' In a 1976 interview for the Irish Times, Gallagher told Joe Breen he wanted to write film scores, screenplays and a concept album in the future. 'Most of all, I would like to envisage myself at 60 years of age like Muddy [Waters]…' he said. 'If I can affect people like he affects me at that age, I'll be happy.' Sadly it wasn't to be. 'I think had he got through the difficult period in music near the end of his life, I think he would've enjoyed a new chapter,' says Marr. 'You could imagine him being on the Jools Holland show every couple of years, playing at the Albert Hall. You could imagine him having the same kind of career as Bonnie Raitt. Or Nick Lowe. 'Someone who could've comfortably got into his vintage years, but there was just a weird curve that happened in the '80s and '90s that made him estranged from popular music. 'I think that's what happened. It sort of rocked him a bit. Had he got round that corner who knows what might've happened.' But the music lives on. Last weekend the annual Rory Gallagher Festival took place in Ballyshannon and blues great Joe Bonamassa will play Gallagher's music for three nights in Cork next month. A new statue of Gallagher was unveiled outside the Ulster Hall in Belfast earlier this year and a road will soon be named in his honour in Cork. His faithful Fender Stratocaster was also donated to the National Museum of Ireland after being sold at auction for more than €1million. It will go on display at Collins Barracks in September. Marr has played the signature Strat a number of times, including one memorable night at Shepherd's Bush Empire in London. 'It caused quite a stir with the band and crew, it was like Excalibur had arrived,' he laughs. He owns another of his hero's old guitars – a bronze Silvertone 1415 which Gallagher used on A Million Miles Away. 'One of my prized possessions.' Over the years he's introduced the likes of Noel Gallagher and Bernard Butler to the Ballyshannon bluesman's music. Marr and his wife Angie have two grown-up children, Sonny and Nile, and Rory is part of their lives too. When Marr played in Athy, Limerick and Donegal last year it seemed like the perfect opportunity for a Johnny Marr Irish Tour '24 album. 'Why didn't I think of that?' he says, laughing. 'I might have to do some shows for that – Irish Tour '26!' Make it happen, Johnny. All you need is a guitar and maybe an amp. They might even let you borrow the one in Collins Barracks again.


RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Kneecap movie takes top prize at Celtic Media Awards
Kneecap, the Belfast rap trio's acclaimed Irish-language origin movie, has won the top prize at this year's Celtic Media Awards in Cornwall. The film was awarded Spirit of the Festival at the three-day celebration of film, television, radio and digital media which promotes languages and cultures of the Celtic nations and regions. Directed by Rich Peppiatt, Kneecap is set in West Belfast in 2019 and tells the story of how the group, consisting of Mo Chara, Móglaí Bap and DJ Próvaí, formed and went on to "change the sound of Irish music forever". The winner for the 2025 #SpiritOfTheFestival is ✨Kneecap✨ @KNEECAPCEOL @richpeppiatt @TG4TV @FPF_Docs @ScreenIreland @NIScreen @CNaM_ie @BFI @belowtheradartv #CelticMedia #TorcAwards #SpiritOfTheFestival — Celtic Media Festival (@CelticMediaFest) June 5, 2025 It also stars Oscar-nominated actor Michael Fassbender, Simone Kirby, Jessica Reynolds and Fionnuala Flaherty. TG4 is the broadcast partner for Kneecap, and the channel's Commissioning Editor, Proinsias Ní Ghráinne, said that this honour follows "a year and a half of incredible success for Kneecap" since the film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2024, where it won the coveted Audience Award. " Kneecap has brought the Irish language to the most important stages of the world as a powerful creative channel that speaks to indigenous cultures, music lovers and anyone who appreciates good storytelling," Ní Ghráinne said. "TG4's commitment to support this wave of excellence in both scripted and non-scripted content is unwavering. It is particularly rewarding to see our content stand up to competition from the best of the best from the Celtic Nations. Comhghairdeas Kneecap." The Celtic Media Festival (CMF) is held annually, rotating between venues in the various Celtic nations and regions, with this year's festival taking place in Newquay, Cornwall.