Alan Phelan and Mark Swords | The List and the Line

Casino at Marino, Dublin

This exhibition brings together two very different art practices in a site specific and responsive installation at Casino Marino. Both artists interconnect conflicting histories through the act of making — with complex collage paintings, layered Joly screen photographs, text works, assemblages and sculptures. The personal is thrown together with the national, consumerism is jumbled with colonialism, visual narratives tumble into abstraction, and pleasure is maybe more pizza box than portico perfection.

 

Over the last century in Ireland, as imperialism was replaced by nationalism, this unique building endured despite what seems like active neglect. The new Irish state was not very forgiving and gobbled up the estate the building was part of for social housing, deals with the Catholic church to build an orphanage, GAA pitches filling the 5-walled garden, rail lines, golf clubs and more, leaving only a small lawn around the Casino.

 

The Casino is not denounced in our time as an absurd folly or a monument to imperial excess and extravagance, but rather it is celebrated as an unlikely architectural gem and national treasure. Built as a pleasure-house, this little maison de plaisance or lustschloss, as called elsewhere, is so much more than kitchen, dining room and bedroom. The Greek origin of the word archive is arkheion, meaning house or abode. In its conception and design this casino, or little house, was a fusion of antiquity that became Georgian neoclassicism and can now be an archive of other potential histories.

 

Where the Earl, James Caulfield partied, the artists now also play. In the initial selection of works there were many direct visual connections with shapes and textures, exotic plants & animals, and indeed parallel symbolism. To this were added new works, responding to and sometimes working against the thematics of specific rooms. The List and the Line is where both artists meet, beyond stripes and potential inventories, to find a way to structure thinking on this incredible place.

The exhibition runs April 13 - July 29, 2024
open daily 10am-4pm
no booking required and entry is free to visitors of the exhibition

Please come! The building is located just beyond Fairview village on the Malahide Road after Griffith Ave and Narazeth House, about 15 mins walk from the village. See casinomarino.ie for more information.

A brochure will be available on site with an essay by James Merrigan and installation photographs by Louis Haugh.


Works and images courtesy the artists and The Molesworth Gallery and Kevin Kavanagh Gallery. Many thanks also to the OPW.

6 April 2024