Home News Community In Pictures: Dunamaise Arts Centre hosting new collection of Ireland’s finest monuments

In Pictures: Dunamaise Arts Centre hosting new collection of Ireland’s finest monuments

Dunamaise Arts Centre Board members with Emer Connolly, Director of the National Monument Service; John Lalor, NMS photographer; Minister of State for Heritage, and Electoral Reform Malcolm Noonan and Cathaoirleach Thomasina Connell at ‘Monumental Ireland - A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.

Dunamaise Arts Centre is currently hosting a stunning new collection of photographs of Ireland’s finest archaeological monuments until April 30.

‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’ is curated by the National Monuments Service (NMS) in partnership with the Office of Public Works (OPW).

Special guest Malcolm Noonan, Minister for Heritage and Electoral Reform, officially opened the exhibition on Thursday March 30.

Offering fresh new perspectives on Ireland’s ancient monuments, the exhibition highlights both the resilience of these monuments and their vulnerability.

The exhibition provides in one space, an accessible and breath-taking gaze at a range of monuments that tell the story of Ireland. The photos are from the National Monuments Service Photographic Unit, originally set up in 1955.

The unit has built upon its collection of photographs over the years and this archive is now approaching 550,000 images, mainly of national monuments and historic properties in State care.

The Photographic Unit’s main function is to record conservation works at national monuments and to maintain its collection of photographs of sites and monuments, recording their condition and conservation works.

Selected images from this photographic archive will be on display to the public at Monumental Ireland, allowing members of the public to witness and appreciate the monuments and the work of the Photographic Unit in cataloguing this heritage.

The exhibition includes remarkable new imagery of the world-renowned Winter Solstice phenomenon at Newgrange passage tomb. As part of a two year research project between NMS and OPW, imagery captured from a high-resolution camera in the burial chamber and controlled via an internet connection, has shown the dawn sun rays illuminating the chamber as never previously captured, enabling this phenomenon to be witnessed by everyone.

There are over 145,000 known archaeological monuments across Ireland, representing more than 12,000 years of human settlement.

This archaeological heritage is central to a sense of place for communities across the country, evidence of continuity and change across
our landscapes and towns.

Offering places of retreat, for quiet reflection and education, they also prompt questioning of a past, which has been at times conflicted in its complexity of ancient tribalism, conquest and independence.

Over the last 150 years, approximately a thousand of these monuments have come into the care of the State and are the responsibility of Ireland’s Office of Public Works and National Monuments Service.

This collection from the NMS Photographic Archive allows an appreciation of the work undertaken to conserve and maintain the monuments. The images demonstrate the value of using modern photographic techniques in preserving records of the past.

Advanced photographic technology is increasingly being used to better understand and record these monuments and conservation work carried out on them.

High Resolution Medium Format cameras are used to capture intense detail of monuments across the country, with infrared camera technology bringing this detail to life, including prehistoric rock art and ship graffiti.

Drone technology is also now an integral part of the survey and monitoring regime, producing photogrammetric models for ongoing conservation research.

These aerial views of iconic monuments within their landscapes brings to view these monuments in a way not previously appreciated.

The exhibition in Dunamaise Gallery is free entry and runs to April 30.

National Monument Service photographer John Lalor from Ballyroan with his sister Deirdre Hyland and mother Marie Lalor at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Fionnuala Heggarty, Sinead Dempsey and Adam Warren at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Shana, John and Liz Lalor at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Minister Sean Fleming, John Lalor, National Monument Service photographer and John Mulholland, Chief Executive Laois County Council at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Marie Lalor, Michelle de Forge, Director Dunamaise Arts Centre; Susan Connolly and Emer Connolly, Director of the National Monument Service at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Cllr Marie Tuohy, Deirdre Hyland and Marie Lalor at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Angela McEvoy, Director of Services Laois County Council; Aga Wypychowska and Alan Dunne at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Donal Brennan, Director of Services Laois County Council and Pauline Carey at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
National Monument Service photographer John Lalor from Ballyroan shows his Rock of Dunamase work to Laois Heritage members Sean Murray and Martin Finn at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Emer Connolly, Director of the National Monument Service; John Lalor, NMS photographer; Michelle de Forge, Director Dunamaise Arts Centre; Minister of State for Heritage, and Electoral Reform Malcolm Noonan; John Mulholland, Chief Executive Laois County Council and Cathaoirleach Thomasina Connell at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Board members Fiona Saunders and Cathaoirleach Thomasina Connell at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Dunamaise Arts Centre Board members with Emer Connolly, Director of the National Monument Service; John Lalor, NMS photographer; Minister of State for Heritage, and Electoral Reform Malcolm Noonan and Cathaoirleach Thomasina Connell at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.
Mary Lalor, Noreen Savage and Catherine Savage at ‘Monumental Ireland – A New Focus’, a photographic exhibition in the Dunamaise Arts Centre featuring photography of Ireland’s National Monuments curated by the National Monuments Service in partnership with the Office of Public Works.
Picture: Alf Harvey.

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