Flight
Frank McElhinney
Exhibition Dates: Saturday 5th August - Sunday 15th October 2023
Launch Event: Friday 4th August - 6.30pm
Times: Open every day, 10am to 4pm
Place: Silver Birch Gallery, The Rockfield Centre
Age: All ages
Cost: Free
Contemporary photography exhibition
Exhibition Launch Event: Friday 4th August, 6.30pm
Join artist Frank McElhinney for the launch evening of Flight at The Rockfield Centre, Oban. During the evening, Frank will be giving an introduction to the project, followed by a Q&A.
This event is free and open to everyone. Refreshments will be provided.
Please RSVP your attendance via the ‘Book Now’ Ticketsource button adjacent and advise The Rockfield Centre at arts@therockfieldcentre.org.uk should you have any questions or accessibility requirements.
Flight is a solo exhibition by artist Frank McElhinney that reflects upon the long history of migration between Ireland and Scotland, with a particular focus on the effects of the Great Famine during the mid-nineteenth century. His work investigates contemporary issues through a historical lens to address issues around conflict, migration, and nationhood. Recent wars in Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan have forced millions of people to flee their homelands. The worsening climate crisis almost guarantees other major population shifts in the near future. The work in the exhibition asks us to consider our own history so that we can better understand the response required to meet the contemporary challenges of mass migration.
This exhibition is the outcome of a long-term and ongoing project which originated in a residency exchange programme in 2019 between Street Level Photoworks and Artlink, Fort Dunree in Donegal, a project which aims to strengthen dialogue and cooperation between Scotland and other European countries, supported by British Council Scotland and Arts Council Ireland.
I’m an atypical artist in a way, in that I’ve started so late. I never thought about making art until I was in my early 40s… After graduating from art school in 2014, the news was full of coverage of people trying to come across the Mediterranean Sea. It was a real tragedy that was unravelling in front of our eyes on the television every night. That had an effect on me and I wanted to make work that responded to that. The first thing that I looked at was the clearances that had happened in Scotland throughout the 19th Century. There was a lot of migration out of Scotland, often in circumstances where that was forced. In a way, I’m not Scottish, I’m an Irish Scot. All my family, on both sides, have come from Ireland and the names of my four grandparents are all Irish. That led me to Donegal, where the McElhinneys came from in the 1870s when they moved to Scotland, looking at things in a more personal way, it was really quite moving, retracing the steps back to the source.
– Frank McElhinney
Flight is part of an on-going partnership between Street Level Photoworks and The Rockfield Centre.
About the artist
Frank McElhinney is a visual artist based in Scotland. His work extends to public engagement activity around various techniques and themes within his work, such as solargraphy and pinhole, and kite aerial photography.
Solo exhibitions include Eist (2021), at the Regional Cultural Centre, Letterkenny, Donegal, Ireland; and group exhibitions Scotland Small? at the Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh (2022); Impression Remains, at the Finnish Museum of Photography, as part of the Finnish Darkroom Festival 2022. His online exhibition and associated events around Only for freedom was supported by Street Level Photoworks in 2020 and marked the beginning of an online series of activities across the lockdowns as a result of the pandemic. In 2018, ‘Postcards from Scotland’ was produced with Street Level Photoworks as an audio-visual work presented at the NIDA International Photography Symposium in Lithuania and as part of La Nuit de l’Instant, in partnership with the Marseille Centre of Photography. He was one of the exhibiting artists in Tabula Rasa, which was exhibited at Kaunas Photography Gallery, Lithuania (2015) and Street Level Photoworks (2016). He was the First Prize recipient of the Jill Todd Photographic Award 2014.