Dublin Plays Itself - an exciting project devised by the IFI and the Irish Architecture Foundation.
We could have asked
for no more perfect a day than last Saturday when the sun shone and a gentle
breeze blew through the city and a troupe of keen and curious walkers gathered
in the Irish Architectural Archive’s beautifully appointed premises in Merrion
Square, the first stop of the Dublin Plays Itself walk.
Ogling the oculus at City Hall
They were here to see
Dr Ellen Rowley, Architectural Historian, and I presenting a series of films
made in and about 4 distinct areas in the South city and to walk with us
through those areas comparing and contrasting the full colour present day
environment with the black and white version of yesteryear. The untried and
untrusted plan was at once exciting and chaotic – who would say what? When? How
exactly would we connect the olden
day films with the modern day streets? Would the juxtapositions of old and new
be good and stark – or would they be subtle or maybe imperceptible? And if the
material didn’t inspire any meaningful response would I resort to babbling
about how many people wore hats in the olden days and wasn’t the traffic very
light and do you remember paying into the Grafton with jam jars and isn’t it
funny how you think there’s loads of pollution now but look how much dirtier
the buildings were 50 years ago.
Happily, Ellen
Rowley’s expertise left no room for my woolly rambling. From the start, she
communicated her genuine delight at spotting moving images of lost but not
forgotten monuments such as the enormous cenotaph erected in 1923 outside government
building in honour of Arthur Griffith
and Michael Collins demolished 1950 and the statue of King William of Orange in
College Green – blown up in 1929. She drew our attention too to the changes in
street surfaces and street furniture and really opened our eyes to the city as
we left the IAA and walked through Merrion Square Park (now home to an al
fresco archive of Dublin lamp standards)
and onwards to Trinity College.
Ready to Roll in TCD
At Trinity we screened an energetic selection of feature and documentary
extracts of films made in and about the college and were delighted when author
Christopher Fitz-Simon piped up from the audience to say not only was he
familiar with the film Building for Books (1958) but he was in it! And he
kindly identified a striking young blonde student in one scene as the artist
Pauline Bewick!
Next stop was City Hall
– where we the film selection reflected the political resonances of the building and adjacent Dublin Castle and then Ellen talked of the building’s
lofty rotunda, the audacious dome (domes heretofore were for sacred buildings).
And then on to our final stop through the
heart of the Liberties to NCAD’s premises in Thomas Street where we screened
the elegiac Torramh an Bhairille about the last days of the Guinness
Coopers and Clubs Are Trumps (1959)
about Our Lady Of Counsel Boys Club, housed in Marshallsea Barracks until
shortly before they were demolished in the early ‘60s.
We finished up, tired
but happy – footsore perhaps but enriched with new knowledge and with a new
curiosity and pride in the city that surrounds us – a living, vibrant museum
that is open to all.
We look forward to
exploring the North City next
Saturday – if Ellen and I can agree on how much footage to include of men pouring concrete, about which she has a weird fetish ( the concrete, not the men pouring it), in the making of the Irish Life Mall.
Sunniva O’Flynn
IFI Curator
There are no places available for Dublin Plays Itself (25th August 2012)
There are no places available for Dublin Plays Itself (25th August 2012)
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