Joly Dots and Don’ts,
Alan Phelan

Published by PhotoIreland
Edition of 200
Softcover
32 pages
148 x 210 mm
€6.00
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Ask about this product from PhotoIreland; TLP Editions DESCRIPTION Alan Phelan has been working with the Joly screen process since 2018, one of the first stable colour photography methods that was invented by Trinity College Dublin physics professor John Joly in the 1880s. The ‘additive’ or ‘separate’ process uses a red, green, and blue striped screen to filter light on exposure and display to make colour from light not chemistry.

The content of the images is broad as Phelan wants to create a visual history for the process that it never had a chance to have as it was abandoned early on.

This selection draws on several projects — flower photographs that reference floral paintings and arrangements over five centuries; self-portraits that connect to queer photography history in performing identities; and ‘dot’ photographs which exploit the layered process, leaving dot gaps in the stripes and adding visual complexity with coloured paper and re-photographed found images. read more

JOLY SCREEN PHOTOGRAPHS
FLEURS TARABISCOTÉ: ALAN PHELAN

This show opened 8 July and presents a new selection of flower photographs. Most will be shown for the first time in Dublin and several have never been shown at all before.

Check the Molesworth Gallery website for details.

An online publication has been produced with Oonagh Young at Design HQ which will be available shortly from the Solstice Arts Centre website.

On Thursday 4 February 2021 Ruth Carroll, curator from the RHA, Dublin will be in discussion with me at the Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris via Zoom at 8pm Paris/ 7pm Ireland – reserve a place here to get the link

The film “Folly & Diction” has been shortlisted for Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin which will be held in Paris from 23-28 February, 2021, at Louvre auditorium.