Past Exhibition
21 September - 11 November 2023
Irish artist Lorraine Tuck’s newly commissioned work tells the story of a family living with autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability. Curated and produced by Photo Museum Ireland this intensely moving and emotionally powerful photographic exhibition is an important contribution to public understanding of neurodivergence and disability.
Tuck is the mother of four children, two boys and two girls. The boys have autism spectrum disorder, which in the case of the youngest, is coupled with severe intellectual disability. Unusual Gestures provides insights into the far-reaching implications that neurodiversity and disability present for families. It explores the impacts – some subtle, some fundamental – on parental and sibling relationships, and charts the challenges and joys of everyday family life. The exhibition succeeds in capturing how everyone, neurotypical as well as neurodiverse, forms the centre of their own separate and singular world, while at the same time it celebrates how we are all inescapably inter-connected to the human family tree.
A further series of works in the exhibition focuses on the artist’s uncle Owen. Born in 1972 in Connemara, Owen has Down’s Syndrome and is gender fluid. At times, Owen chooses to live as a woman called ‘Pink’. Owen/Pink has collaborated with Tuck to produce a series of portraits exploring their fluid gender identity with joyful and refreshing honesty.
At its heart, this exhibition is about love more than autism or disability. Transcending a documentary or issue-based record, Tuck’s work is a beautiful and clear-eyed call for acceptance and inclusion.
Artist-led Workshop for Parents of Children with Autism and Severe Intellectual Disability
Tuesday 10th October 11:30am – 12:45pm or 2.00pm – 3:15pm
The artist will lead a workshop specially designed for parents of children with autism and intellectual disability. The workshop will demonstrate how photography can be employed in communicating with your child. Free but booking is required. Places very limited.
The exhibition Unusual Gestures was commissioned and curated by Photo Museum Ireland. The touring exhibition was developed in partnership with Galway International Arts Festival and Regional Cultural Centre, Letterkenny. The Commission and the Touring Exhibition are supported by The Arts Council. Premiere: Galway International Arts Festival: 17 – 30 July 2023.
5:15 pm to 6:00 pm
Thursday, 21 September 2023
Irish artist Lorraine Tuck’s newly commissioned work tells the story of a family living with autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability. Curated and produced by Photo Museum Ireland this intensely moving and emotionally powerful photographic exhibition is an important contribution to public understanding of neurodivergence and disability.
Join us for an exhibition tour led by the Artist Lorraine Tuck.
6:00 pm to 8:00 pm
Thursday, 21 September 2023
Join us to celebrate the opening of Unusual Gestures by Irish Artist Lorraine Tuck.
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Friday, 22 September 2023
Discover the story behind the lens! On Friday, September 22nd, we invite you to join us for an exclusive series of guided tours that will unveil the stories and perspectives hidden within our remarkable photo exhibition, "Unusual Gestures" by Irish artist Lorraine Tuck.
10:00 pm to
Friday, 22 September 2023
Join us for a special live performance by Pink a.k.a. Owen O’Malley that draws on his collaborative portrait series made with his niece Lorraine Tuck. Happening in our exhibition space alongside a major curated solo exhibition of work by Lorraine Tuck, about neurodiversity and family life. Inspired by junk couture fashion shows, Pink will present herself as three personas, taking up some of the themes of identity, beauty and masquerade that are explored in Tuck's portraits.
Lorraine Tuck is a photographer from Co. Galway. She studied photography at Sallynoggin College, Dublin and graduated with a BA (Hons) Documentary Photography from the University of Wales, Newport College. Since graduation, she has spent much of her time making work that has been influenced by the landscape of Connemara, exploring the un-consecrated children’s burial grounds in ‘Cillín/Children in Limbo’, and the Connemara railway line, published in book form as ‘The Whistle Blowing’ (2015).
She was commissioned by The Arts Council/Photo Museum Ireland to develop ‘Unusual Gestures’. The exhibition has toured to Galway International Arts Festival, and will be staged at the Regional Cultural Centre Letterkenny (2023-24). Her work is in numerous private and public collections, including The Arts Council, Office of Public Works, and University of Galway.