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'Meeting of the Waters' 30.09.10

Inishowen takes part in major art installation

INISHOWEN is taking part in a major cross-border public art project that will use the beautiful Lough Foyle waterway and its inhabitants as a living, lasting canvas.
The Tuns Project, is a PEACE III-funded project that aims to animate the Foyle as a public space that connects people to each other, to their land and ultimately to a shared, peaceful future. The Tuns, off the coast of Inishowen Head, is where the Foyle meets the North Atlantic.
The ambitious floating project is the brainchild of leading Boston artist, Michael Dowling, who runs Medicine Wheel Productions and Medicine Wheel Ireland.
A regular visitor to Moville, Dowling has been captivated over the years by the enduring, artistic possibilities of the Foyle and the 300,000 people who live along its shores.
Dowling flew back to the US yesterday after a month-long series of workshops in communities around Inishowen, other parts of Co Donegal, Derry and Strabane.
Boston artist, Michael Dowling, seated centre, pictured with members of Moville Rowing Club during a recent workshop as part of the Tuns/Tonnes Project. Included in photo are, from left, Jackie Kelly, Olwyn Kelly, Kate McLaughlin, Hugh Kelly, Cahir Kelly, Kathleen McGonagle, Robert Kelly, Tracy Cullen and her daughter Thi Lana.
"The project invokes the myths, history, and energy of the border area encompassing Strabane, Derry and Donegal, from the source of the Foyle to the North Atlantic.
"The project invites the 300,000 people who live in this area to engage in the creation of a work of art in the community and to create a shared future history," he said.
The Tuns Project directly or indirectly addresses the Peace and Reconciliation objectives. "It is not about shedding the past but about looking to the future," added Dowling. The project involves four phases: 'Bearing Witness'; 'Physical Witness'; 'Testimony - Giving Voice' and 'The Tuns - A Meeting of the Waters'.
The first phase involves the creation of 300 handmade slate-covered books, inviting participants to create a collection of the different, and often conflicting, truths of a people, a place, and a time.
Click on play above to find out more about the Tuns Project.
Phase Two involves transcribing and engraving the words from the books onto stones. Community groups will also be invited to build cairns from these stones on specific sites within their communities, which later will be transported to a floating sculptural installation built on a vessel that will travel down the Foyle from its source at Strabane all the way to the Tuns. The testimonial phase involves the rendition of an epic poem as the Tuns vessel is launched. The vessel itself will be a square barge with its middle open to the water of the river. The artist added: "We believe this project has an artistic resonance with the urban regeneration of key river front sites. The Tuns/Tonnes project will animate the body of water that divides Waterside from Cityside and the North from the Republic.
“The active presence of the barge as it moves along its route will be a visible reminder of its purpose. We hope to find ways to keep the barge on the river in the years following the initial project, and to use it as a venue for arts events such as high quality performance of dance, drama, video, music, and visual arts," he said.
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