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DENNIS MCNULTY
Projected from first principles, 2010 (1st Floor)
Two HD projections, metal, 3 two-way mirrored glass panels, mylar & sound

Dennis McNulty - Projected from first principles
Dennis McNulty, Projected from first principles, 2010

Dennis McNulty’s sculptural works, installations and sound performances deal with the friction between the planned and the unplanned, particularly in relation to urban spaces. Drawing on his research into the history of the urban fabric, he employs sound, image and objects in spatial configurations to dislocate the viewer/listener through an overlap of multiple times and spaces. Architecture and urban planning often form a starting point for McNulty. McNulty considers how and what buildings become, their values, failures and possibilities. Undercurrents of science-fiction and fantasy interplay with social, political and architectural histories, in works which weigh intention against physical experience.

This work entitled Projected from first principles sites two alternating HD videos within a constructed space. One is projected onto the wall accompanied by somewhat ambiguous, though distinctly urban sounds and the other is projected into a triangular arrangement of two-way mirror glass. The former features images of a seated figure wearing a mirrored visor and gesturing to the viewer. A pen and a sphere are offered as props in the explanation of forms and signs but what is this communication? How do we understand? There is a certainty in the figure’s gestures, a precision of form and clear intent, and yet we feel as though something eludes us. In the background, reflected images of landmark buildings in downtown Pittsburgh and traffic on a freeway ramp, slowly shift, suggesting an infinite flow and perhaps an inability to stop.

The other video presents a fragment of footage of a car journey along the freeway, intertwining and looping again and again, on an endlessly repeating excursion. The image repeats itself visually to infinity in the two-way mirror matrix; a never-ending loop or a journey to nowhere.

These two videos alternate with each other and within this mechanism of display suggests a tension or friction, an ambition to control and be certain of something, anything, and yet an inability to stop the motion of time or progress. The reflections that are employed in all aspects of this work confirm our role in and responsibility for the systems that currently surround us.

Forthcoming and recent exhibitions include: The Seventh Dream of Teenage Heaven, Bureau for Open Culture, Columbus, Ohio, 2010 ; Our need for consolation is impossible to satiate, Galway Arts Centre, Galway, 2009; framework/rupture, Green On Red Gallery, Dublin, (solo); The sound I'm looking for, Charles H. Scott Gallery, Vancouver; Landscape 08, The Dock, Carrick On Shannon, all 2008; Encuentro de Medellin, Medellin, Colombia; Your position as much as your environment, Model Arts and Niland Galleries, Sligo, all 2007. He has also created soundtracks for the films Seaview (Still Films, 2008), Helen (Joe Lawlor & Christine Molloy, 2008) and Joy (Joe Lawlor & Christine Molloy, 2008) which won the Prix UIP at the Rotterdam International Film Festival. McNulty lives and works in Dublin, Ireland.

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