free 2015 magazine issue 03
november
ISSN - 2009-8650
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Welcome
TO t he li merick magaz i n e The Limerick Magazine is a fun and informative monthly free-sheet keeping you up to date with what is happening in Limerick
City and County, with reviews, event listings, interviews, men and women’s fashion, lively opinion and interesting articles to get you talking.
Publisher - Fusion Media - 74 O’Connell Street Limerick - 061-597627 Editor - Kayleigh Ziolo
Email - kayleigh@fusionmedia.ie Phone - 061-597627
Designer - Keith Aherne
Email - design@fusionmedia.ie Phone - 061-597627 Editor in Chief
Michelle Costello
michelle@fusionmedia.ie
TLM contributors:
Photographers:
Cornelia O’Riordan
COVER: Maurice Gunning
Olivia Chau
Leanne Aherne
Rebecca Egan Rebelle Haze
Shauna Lindsay Mary Kiely
Sophie Butler
Olivia O’Sullivan Sintija Zorge
Mike McGrath
Christine Costello
Jane Butler O’Halloran Nigel Dugdale
Eoghan Lyons John Kelly
Jonathan Castillo Keith Wiseman Mark Duggan
Advertising - Conor O’Sullivan
Email - conor@fusionmedia.ie
Phone - 061-597627
This is a free magazine. You are free to give it away (in unmodified form) to whomever you wish. No part of this magazine may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. This magazine is designed to provide information to our readers. It is provided with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged to render any type of legal or any other kind of professional advice. The content of each article is the sole expression and opinion of its author, and not necessarily that of the publisher. No warranties or guarantees are expressed or implied by the publisher’s choice to include any of the content in this volume. Neither the publisher nor the individual author(s) shall be liable for any physical, psychological, emotional, financial, or commercial damages, including, but not limited to, special, incidental, consequential or other damages. Our views and rights are the same: You are responsible for your own choices, actions, and results.
Fernando Sanchez Dr Tony Langlois Sharon Slater
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L imeri ck S o unds capes Have you ever looked at old photographs of Limerick, with their horse-drawn carriages, steam engines, cobbled streets, and wondered what it must have been
could hear their voices, and wouldn’t the everyday sounds of their lives be fascinating to modern ears?
like to be there, to be surrounded by the sights and the
Those are some of the questions that inspired Aileen
gone days, and perhaps even our great grandparents
Soundscape project in 2013. The plan was simple, to
sounds? Although we can still see pictures of longin them, wouldn’t it really bring the past to life if we
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Dillane and Tony Langlois to devise the Limerick
work with every kind of local community in Limerick
City and help them to record the everyday sounds of their lives. The best of these sounds would be chosen by the community group themselves, and uploaded
to an online sound map of the city for all to hear. Over time, hundreds of recordings would build up a rich archive of material, marking the shifts in urban sounds as they evolve over the decades.
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In the future, listeners would hear accents change,
supermarkets, on telephone holding cycles, mobile
The Limerick Soundscapes project is still in its
even the voices of individuals mature over their
overlapped with the sounds of people and their sonic
groups, each of which contributes to the richness
technologies and modes of travel come and go, and lifetimes.
The starting point of the Limerick Soundscape project is that everyone hears his or her world differently. A
sound that might be exciting to some - for example, the mixture of music and voices at a party - might be annoying to other listeners. Also, there are some
sounds that have very personal associations, such as the purr of a pet cat or a relative’s doorbell, that bring
pleasure to the individual but mean little to other
people. Limerick Soundscapes is unique amongst other ‘sonic city’ projects in that it doesn’t take a top-
down approach to sound mapping – it is open to
those sounds that are meaningful to the individuals who record and submit them. So, if the sound of
phones, and in each of those places the music
environment. Inspired by some of the sonic city recording websites that have sprung up around the world, they decided that the scope of their own project
would need to be much wider than music alone and, in order to capture changes in the sound environment, much longer than the typical study. The minimum duration of the project, they agreed, should be about
a century, encompassing at least three generations of sound collectors. In order to ensure that the project was as inclusive as possible, it was decided that local
communities should have considerable control of the
recordings that represented their neighbourhood. After all, these were the sounds that had the most meaning for them.
autumn leaves blowing around the park in November,
The pilot project in 2013 involved three local
in June evoke a sense of place for people in the
recording and sent off to bring back the sounds of
or the voices of children playing in the same place neighbourhood then they are all worthy of inclusion.
Aileen Dillane of the Academy of Music and Dance
University of Limerick and Tony Langlois of Mary Immaculate College both have backgrounds in
Ethnomusicology, the study of music in everyday culture. Their initial idea behind the project was to
create a map of all the musical spaces in the Limerick area; the concert halls, pubs, busking sites, school orchestras – but it soon became clear that there was
much more around than organised musical activities. Music could be heard blaring from cars, playing in
community groups who were given basic training in
early days but is engaging with more and more local of the archive. It’s fascinating to hear how each
neighbourhood has its own distinct soundscape, depending on whether they are near the river, in leafy
suburbs or busy estates. Each sound added to the map
adds to a deeper picture of the city and its multiple
spaces, in ways that are often surprising and touching. Perhaps this is because we rarely have the opportunity to hear the world through another person’s ears!
Groups of any kind who are interested in a short series of workshops in the next months are welcome to get in touch for more details. www.limericksoundscapes.ie Article by: Dr Tony Langlois
Photography by: Jonathan Castillo
their lives. The variety of sounds that came back was remarkable, from the buzzing of a tattoo parlour to rain on a car roof, revelers jostling for taxis after a
night out to aerobic classes. The best of these were edited and uploaded to a specially designed web-map of the city, so that listeners can tell exactly where and
when the recordings were made. In time the project
expects to have dozens of recordings for each location,
so the same site can be heard in different seasons, during special events, and as people themselves, with their accents, music and tastes, flow through the city’s lifetime.
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L i m e ri ck NEWS : Thanks Dr Paulie This month, Limerick Rugby legend Paul O’Connell
was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Science from University of Limerick. Speaking at the ceremony, Dr
Paul O’Connell said °I’m delighted and overwhelmed, looking at the list of previous it’s great company I’m keeping! It’s been such a positive day, everyone’s been
so nice. I was blown away when first got the call, growing up here in Limerick, UL ends up being a big
part of your life, I took part in all manner of activities here. To be appreciated by your own university is something very special.”
UL President Professor Don Barry said, “The awarding of a University of Limerick Honorary
Doctorate is an occasion when we get the opportunity to honour those who have inspired, who have led with courage and passion and who have made great contributions in their fields of endeavour. Much
thought, consideration and deliberation goes into deciding who is worthy…… except when it is a reallife super hero, and particularly when his name is Paul O’ Connell. Today I am very proud that UL bestowed
upon Paul our highest honour. He was already an important member of the UL family, but today he accepted a place in the history of this institution.”
7th Annual Limerick Film Festival Call for Entries! The Limerick Film Festival is back. Now in its seventh year, the LIT founded three-day event has
grown in size and reputation, attracting hundreds of filmmakers and visitors from home and abroad.
The Limerick Film Festival team will be bringing
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professional filmmakers, actors, producers, directors and many more to the city in April 2016. They have a continued focus on expanding the festival in and
around the city. The Short Film Awards Show will give
the filmmaking talent of Limerick a chance to show off their skills to a wider national and international audience.
Film Submissions and Competition details can now
be found on the website: www.limerickfilmfestival. net
Limerick Film Festival proudly accepts entries via FilmFreeway.com, the world’s best online submissions
platform, which boasts free HD online screeners, Vimeo and YouTube integration, and more.
The planning for the festival’s schedule is already well
underway, with an official launch scheduled for early 2016. Previous years’ speakers have included Mad
Max: Fury Road Co-Author Brendan McCarthy, Irish Film Maker and Limerick man Kevin Liddy, Irish Film Music Composer Patrick Cassidy, top
Irish comedian and producer Pat Shortt, the highly
respected Irish Producer Lelia Doolan, Director Pat Comer, Editor Nathan Nugent, and writer Rob
Crawley. High calibre industry workshops will also be on offer in 2016, including master classes by the festival sponsors and touch-and-try demonstration events.
The festival culminates with the highly anticipated
Short Film Awards Show at the Millennium Theatre. The ceremony will be recorded by Video and Sound
Technology students of LIT and also streamed live on the website.
Further information can be found on www.limerickfilmfestival.net
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Talk i ng P o i n ts i n L i m e ri ck ci ty & County
International Fashion Incubator comes to the city
ACI Worldwide to open new data centre in Limerick in 2016
LIT has launched an International Fashion Incubator
Electronic payment solutions and banking company
Limerick City Centre. LIT’s new International
EMEA data centre in Limerick in 2016, in order
and Centre of Excellence in Fashion Design in Fashion Incubator Limerick (IFIL), which will create
employment in Limerick and link the city centre into the international fashion industry was launched today by Minister for Education, Jan O’Sullivan. The launch
was part of the opening of the refurbished Merriman House on Lock Quay, a new Centre of Excellence in Fashion Design that builds on the international reputation of LSAD.
Limerick2020 enters second phase of the bid
ACI announced this month that it will open a new to meet increased European demand. It will be the company’s largest data centre in Europe, according to siliconrepublic.com.
Christmas Time The lights are on, the countdown has officially begun! Light Up Limerick took place on Sunday
15th November, with the lights switched on by Santa himself. The festivities have already begun
with ‘Celebrating Christmas in Limerick - The
City of Fashion’ Hosted by Celia Holman-Lee, the
Friday the 13th may be unlucky for some, but
event includes a Christmas window competition,
Limerick2020 European Capital of Culture team
style demonstrations and mini fashion roadshows,
we’re wishing nothing but good fortune for the
Limerick Design & Craft Hub mini fashion show,
who as the bid enters the next crucial stage. On 13th
and Limerick on Ice is set to open later in the month.
November, the team presented their case for the city to be shortlisted to a European jury. This came as a host of Limerick legends publicly gave their backing
to the bid, including Pat Shortt and Cranberries guitarist Niall Hogan.
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a rti st Pro file Steve Maher Steve Maher is a professional artist from Limerick, currently based in Helsinki. He has been involved in
many art projects and festivals that shape the cultural
fabric of Limerick City and County, as well as taking his own solo exhibitions to countries across Europe
and even as far as North America. In 2014, he was given the Kieran Meagher Legacy Award, a prize of €10,000 awarded by Limerick City of Culture to
support his career as an emerging artist. We catch
up with him ahead of his new Limerick exhibition, Melody is the Message, which will be open to the
public at Church Gallery LSAD from 10th December. Where did your artistic career start?
I actually began as a musician on the local music scene in Limerick. I was in a punk band, and then an experimental group. I studied sculpture and combined
media at LSAD then went on to do an MA in social practice and the creative environment. I’ve been lucky
enough to build a career as a professional artist, and that’s in no small part due to the support of Limerick
and the scope of what I have been able to produce was enormously boosted by the Kieran Meagher Legacy Award. Most of my work is socially engaged art – using the mechanisms of society in our surroundings as art
material to create something new and to make people
consider the everyday in a different way. Sometimes it means making a sculpture or installation out of found
items, other times it’s adding or changing something
in the surroundings to make it art. Socially engaged
art is regarded as an emerging form but it’s actually well established, looking at the everyday and making it art is nothing new.
What examples can you give us of everyday features
word out and sell yourself, most people are going to
One example of using sounds that surround us is
and really show the work as you intended.
in such a way?
Heavy Metal Elevator, an installation I created last year
at the gallery in Spain. Everywhere we go nowadays,
You are based in Helsinki, what is like being a
market, eaterie, lobby has some kind of music piping
Helsinki is internationally renowned for its arts scene,
it seems like we’re given a soundtrack – every shop, out. Often it’s just there to fill a silence, and it’s meant to be as unintrusive, unchallenging and inoffensive
as possible. It exists to manipulate our experience
of that place, to provide comfort and make us stay
that bit longer or consider buying that bit more. So
professional artist there?
and it’s probably similar to Limerick in that there’s a lot of mutual support for all creative endeavours, it’s
a place where young emerging artists can find a lot of inspiration and collaboration.
what if we change that? What if the music suddenly
What was your experience of the Limerick arts
background noise? An elevator is the smallest, most
Limerick creativity is just unreal. I suppose it’s more
is something other than the tinny, formulaic pop
enclosed space where this kind of music is typically used, and heavy metal is probably one of the most
intrusive genres of music, it’s the complete opposite of the innocuous, soft tinkling of the classic elevator music. So we collaborated with a Finnish Black metal
band and played their music in the gallery’s actual
elevators. We set it up so that as soon as the lift doors
opened for the person waiting, the music would blare out. It got some great responses.
How do you document those kinds of immersive art exhibitions? Is it difficult to portray the experience of being there?
Trying to record and present those installations is like creating a whole other exhibition. Like, with the Heavy Metal Elevator, videos of the reactions became a bit
like candid camera – next time I want to approach it slightly differently. There’s so much to consider when
trying to put that online for others to see. Of course we want as many people to experience it first hand
as possible, but in order to make that happen people have to be able to see you online, it’s how you get the
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find you that way. So yes, it is difficult to get that right
scene?
known about since 2014, but people don’t realise that we were always here doing those things long before
City of Culture was even thought of as a possibility. There’s a such a strong support network across the creative scene, and beyond in fact, and everyone
wants to see you succeed. Plus LSAD is producing
more professional artists than any other college as far
as I know. The underground arts scene of Limerick
is unique, and even though I don’t live there now I
still maintain that connection with other artists and what’s happening there – in fact we recently hosted Lotte Bender’s Street Line Critics in Helsinki. The
city has come a long way in terms of culture and it’s fantastic to see people gaining from that confidence.
Something else people might not know is that Ormston House also has a fantastic international reputation in the art world. It’s something the whole
of Limerick should be very proud of. I’m proud too to have had the opportunity to be Project Manager there
with the amazing visionary people who have worked to make it such a beacon of success.
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Discordion, a sonic sculpture on a Helsinki tram, one of Maher’s recent projects
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You’re bringing Melody is the Message, your new
able to cross genres and collaborate with other
December. Can you tell us a bit about it?
what we’re both familiar with. One of my favourite
solo exhibition, to the Church Gallery, LSAD in
It’s a collection of works curated by Paul Tarpey, exploring the message contained in melody. When we
think of the message of music we often focus on the lyrics, but what is the cultural meaning and impact of the musical melody itself ? The Church Gallery is
a fantastic setting, and is one of the largest open wall arts spaces in the country. The exhibition will open on 10th December and is on until January 2016.
You’re currently on a residency in London. Tell us how that came about?
It’s an exchange between Askeaton Contemporary Arts (ACA) who have partnered with Tottenham
and Hale International Studio (THIS). I will be here until December when I return to Limerick. I’ve
previously produced work with ACA for Welcome to The Neighbourhood 2014, comprising of the Ghost
Estate Model Village on the edge of the four roads; Sentences, in which excerpts from local literary
sources flash across Supervalu’s LED scrolling sign, and at Cagney’s Bar, a video was shown about the illegal distilling and procurement of Poitin alcohol in the Askeaton area.
What other collaborations have you been involved in?
My work is centred on collaboration, it’s great being
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creators to produce something that’s a bit outside of
projects of this kind was Take One Down, where we worked with an all-male Finnish choir, who’d been
singing together for many years and were long time
friends with each other. We then created and brewed
our own beer, 150 bottles of it. The choir learned some traditional drinking songs, which as you can imagine sounded quite incredible. They performed in front of an audience, who had wordsheets to sing along, and the beer was given out to everyone, so it had all the
elements of sound, taste, performance. In terms of
artist collaboration, I am part of These Animals, an art research group made up of me, my wife Anastasia
Artemeva, who in my opinion is a far more talented artist than me, and another artist couple Alan Bulfin and Pii Anttila. We held our first event, Gaming the System in September, which invited artists to present multimedia and interactive artworks that look at the concept of ‘play’. We looked at neuroscientific research
on both human and animal emotions to understand
the innateness of social play and why we create games structures and rules.
For more information on Steve’s art visit www.stevemaher.net
Article by: Kayleigh Ziolo
Photography by: Steve Maher & Anastasia Artemeva
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Movember Mo’ your stuff It has come to that time of the year again, the time
where men all over Ireland, and indeed the world, let their facial hair grow for an extremely worthy
Movember fundraiser: Councillor Daniel Butler
cause. Movember has been a very popular campaign
Limerick Councillor Daniel Butler is doing his bit to
made a huge impact here in Ireland. It is also possibly
the full month of November. We spoke to him about the
they have to do is let their lip hair grow in a bid to raise
campaign and about how incredibly important the cause
worldwide for many years and has most certainly
back the Movember campaign by letting his mo’ grow for
one of the easiest campaigns to support for men: all
personal reasons he decided to take part in the Movember
money and awareness for men’s health and cancer. It’s
is.
the support of women (or Mo Sistas) and this year
Why have you decided to raise funds for the
currently in full swing, with many people signing up
I suppose I decided primarily for two reasons to take
money on the path to health.
father, Richard Butler, two years ago aged 56 after
Unfortunately there is still a serious lack of
treatment successfully but the aggressive nature of
issues in Ireland. This is compounded by the crippling
illness related to the radiotherapy. More and more
openly about their health, to visit the doctor or seek
caused by the treatment that can take their lives
diagnosed with prostate cancer in his lifetime, and
aggressive treatments, and I would like people to
males between the ages of 15 and 35. The Movember
about. Secondly, I am a keen advocate for men’s health
awareness and changing the way people manage their
is a key part of what Movember is. Being able to use
even though it may be too late to grow a moustache,
to more selfish reasons is important to me. If I can
possible, whether it’s setting up a MOVE event or
then I am happy.
not just moustaches though – Movember also enlists
there is particular focus on exercise. MOVEmber is
Movember campaign?
to an 8 week programme of yoga, or Moga, to raise
part in Movember. The first being that I lost my
he had contracted throat cancer. He completed the
understanding and awareness about men’s health
the treatment meant he passed away from secondary
stereotype of men being extremely reluctant to talk
people are surviving cancer but it’s often illness
help. The statistics show that 1 in 6 men will be
because radiotherapy or chemotherapy are very
that testicular cancer is the most common cancer in
be aware of that as it’s not something often talked
campaign has been a real driving force in raising
issues in general, particularly mental health and that
health, bringing the conversation out into the open. So
my profile as a local councillor positively as opposed
we urge you all anyone to become involved in any way
be part of a conversation that creates positive change
supporting someone who is fundraising.
be correctly informed about prostate and testicular cancer?
As part of my profession as a drug worker with
Limerick City Drug Education and Prevention
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I
deliver
Football a programme aimed at men aged 18-25
who are unemployed and not engaged in education or services. This is a men’s health programme and
seeing when men get the chance and the education that they can make positive changes is inspiring. We introduce key men’s health issues including prostrate
and testicular cancer to lads who would never think of getting that checked.
What does the Movember campaign mean to you?
It’s so important that us men go to the doctor more often and ask the questions. We look after our cars better than we do ourselves. I know I am guilty of
that - if I have aches or pains or I am not feeling well that I spend a week moaning about it while my wife
tells me to see a doctor, which I ignore, in the hope
How important do you think it is for Irish men to
Strategy
programmes. The key one being Fitness through
various
health
promotion
it disappears and I can tough it out. After a week if it’s still there I just ignore until I get used to it and
learn to get on with it, at which point it could be more
serious. I think I am not alone In that. So this month
just asks us men to take time to take care of ourselves and visit a doctor and get a full NCT in the hope that we can fight the tide of cancer.
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A ‘Stache of Information It helps to know some of the common symptoms of
men’s cancer, which we’ve listed here. Not all of these symptoms automatically indicate cancer, and some men experience no symptoms at all. That’s why it’s
important, particularly for older men, to have regular health checks and keep a close eye on your general wellbeing.
You know your body better than anyone. If you notice
something out of the ordinary, whether it’s on a list or not, do something. Early detection always saves lives
and improves outcomes, so get to your doctor. And
if it’s nothing, it simply means your mind is at ease much sooner.
Article by: Cornelia O’Riordan Photograph by: John Kelly
Testicular Cancer Symptoms •
Swelling or a lump in either testicle (usually painless)
•
Change in size and shape of testicles
• • • •
A feeling of heaviness in the scrotum
Aches or pain in the lower abdomen or groin Sudden build of fluid in scrotum Enlargement of breast tissue
Prostate Cancer Symptoms •
Need to urinate frequently, especially at night.
•
Weak or interrupted flow of urine
• • • • •
Difficulty starting urination or holding back urine Painful or burning urination Painful ejaculation
Blood in urine or semen
Frequent pain or stiffness in the lower back, hips or upper thighs.
10 Early Warning Cancer Sign You Should Not Ignore 1. New lumps or growth on your skin 2. A sore or bruise that does not heal
3. A mole that changes in size or colour, or bleeds in unusual circumstances 4. An ongoing cough or hoarseness that last longer than three weeks. 5. Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing
6. A change in bowel or bladder habits for no good reason 7. Shortness of breath 8. Loss of appetite
9. Unexplained weight loss or tiredness
10. Blood anywhere it normally should not be – in urine, bowel motions, or from spitting. More information and advice can be found at www.ie.movember.com
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Craft
i n t he city
Limerick Lace Irish crafts are world class, and have a rich history. Waterford Crystal and Donegal Tweed are just a couple
of famous examples, but none are more fascinating than the infamous craft and industry of Limerick Lace.
“Limerick lace was one of the greatest craft industries in Irish history and one of the most famous and
beautiful laces in the world,” explains Dr. Matthew Potter, author of Amazing Lace: A history of the Limerick Lace Industry.
At its peak in the early 1850s, an estimated 1,800
people were employed in Limerick City making lace. Over many decades, Limerick Lace produced a large
output of lace products, from dresses, christening
shawls and ecclesiastical robes to handkerchiefs and doilies. Limerick Lace is a mixed lace, meaning it is
traditionally hand embroidered on machine made net. There were two ‘golden ages’ of Limerick Lace. The
first age of factory manufacture began in 1829 when
English businessman Charles Walker chose Limerick
as the location for his lace factory, due to the lower costs associated with manufacturing in Ireland. The factory was situated on Mount Kennett Road.
The social history of Limerick was altered by the lace industry. The Limerick Lace industry provided
employment to a significant proportion of the female
workforce, who in turn supported or helped to support
a large number of dependent relatives. In 1851, it was estimated that each lace worker maintained two or three other family members.
Around the 1960s, Limerick Lace was in decline, due to fully machine manufactured lace coming out of
Nottingham. It wasn’t until the 1880s that lace would see a revival in the city, this time in the form of home
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and workshop production. The revival came about thanks to a woman called Florence Vere O’Brien, an English lady who married into the O’Brien family of Dromoland Castle. She began to employ former
lace factory workers to make lace for her in their own
homes, which she then sold. In 1893, she established a Limerick lace school in O’Connell Street which
taught skills, provided workrooms and was used as
depots where the lace was sold. After their training was completed, the former pupils usually became lace workers, working at home and using the school as their depot.
Limerick Lace was worn by thousands of women, including many of high profile and high status, such as Queen Victoria, American First Lady Edith Roosevelt and Countess Markievicz. Generations of
churchmen also wore Limerick lace and used lace to decorate their churches, in Ireland and throughout the Irish Diaspora.
So what of Limerick Lace today? There are still plenty
of opportunities to learn about the history of the craft. Limerick Museum is currently showing its exhibition, Amazing Lace , showcasing its fine collection of
Limerick Lace in Istabraq Hall, Limerick City Hall, Merchants Quay.
At the end of 2014, Limerick Museum and Archives
published the aforementioned Amazing Lace book, which is the definitive history of the Limerick lace
industry researched and written by Dr Potter and edited by Jacqui Hayes, Limerick City and County Archivist.
Limerick Museum and Archives is also keeping the
craft alive in today’s culture, by sponsoring a lace design competition open to all students of Limerick
School of Art and Design. The winning designs will
receive the Florence Vere O’Brien award, named
in honour of the person responsible for reviving Limerick lace in the 1880s and 1890s.
In addition, the museum is forging partnerships with
the Lace Museum in Calais and the Lace Research
Network in Britain. Calais continues to have the
most important lace industry in the world and these
links are expected to be developed in the future. The museum hopes to connect the craft with the city and create a contemporary future for Limerick Lace.
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Ironwork in Limerick Ironwork also has a long and rich history in Limerick. Patrick McDonnel’s article on Limerick Iron Foundaries 1806-1989 gives a great insight into the
craft. There was a large iron making industry in the
Sliabh Aughty area of East Clare where extensive native woodlands extended from near Tulla to Portumna. The remains of two blast furnaces can be
seen at Whitegate and Raheen, near Tuamgreaney.
Iron ore was also mined near Askeaton and shipped to
sorts of products including kitchen ranges. Ironwork
and again by boat to the furnace sites. Ore was also
closure of the Shannon foundry, which was by then
Limerick from where it was taken by road to Killaloe imported from England to Limerick and transported in to the East Clare blast furnaces. During the
industrial revolution demand greatly increased and an iron foundry was set up on Clare Street by James
Doyle in 1806. His was the first in Limerick to use the cupola furnace and began a new form of manufacture that would lead to numerous foundries producing all
in Limerick would continue until 1989 with the the last remaining foundry in Limerick.
Today, Eric O’Neill, artist blacksmith, puts a new spin on ironwork, and is educating many others in the
historical significance and practical learning of the traditional craft. He’s currently teaching the first City and Guilds accredited blacksmithing course in the
country at LCFE Cappamore, leads a Skills for work Programme which was part of the Skills for Work
submission that won the Aontas Star Award last year, and is also teaching introduction evening classes to
the craft of blacksmithing at the same venue, the only fully kitted out forge classroom in the country.
As an artist blacksmith, he is artist in residence at
Cappamore Arts Studios, where he designs and completes ongoing projects and continue his “journey
of self-development in my chosen medium.” Eric’s
work is currently on show at Limerick Craft Hub, The
Hunt Museum, Dartfield House Museum Loughrae, The Design and Craft Studio Charleville and at his own studio at Cappamore Library. He lectures on and
demonstrates his craft countrywide, to educate all as
to the importance of this little understood aspect of our cultural heritage. The most recent project Eric was was involved with in this area was the restoration of Crecora Churchs gates and railings.
You can take a look at more of his work on the website www.killuraghkraftworks.com.
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
LIMERICK CRAFT HUB HANDMADE IN LIMERICK
Limerick Silver Fergus Grant Stevenson is a self-taught silversmith. His interest in the
craft was little more than a casual hobby. “I had always been interested
in making things with my hands, and ancient crafts and techniques. The interest was piqued while I was working as an archaeologist in
Dublin – the things we were finding were beautiful, intricate pieces
of jewellery. I had been on a series of intense courses with masters of siliversmith craft. My profession meant that we saw the recession coming, probably a lot sooner than most. Archaeological impact
surveys on building sites have to be completed a long time before
any building work actually starts, so when our work started to dry up we knew it was on the cards. That’s when I took the opportunity
to buy some tools and sure enough, the archaeology work was gone and I soon found myself making jewellery for a living. I also make large silver pieces spoons, bowls, plates etc., which is what Limerick
silver is most famous for.” Of course the Ardagh Chalice, part of the Ardagh hoard found here is the most famous artefact in Ireland. Silver finds in Limerick even date back to Roman times, with the discovery
of silver hacks and ingots at Balline, though it’s unclear whether the hoard was seized booty from elsewhere, or payment received by Irish mercenaries from the Roman Empire.
Another silversmith fact: the distinction between a silversmith and a goldsmith is not just silver and gold – a goldsmith works solely on
the small intricate jewellery scale, while silversmith traditionally work larger items. Fergus’s
jewellery
can
be
found
on
his
website,
www.
forgottensilverjewellery.com. He has recently been commissioned by the Limerick Museum to produce a large silver artwork, of which he is currently in the drawing stages.
There are regular silver jewellery workshops at the Limerick Craft
Hub, for anyone who wants to get a taste of the craft and connect with another of Limerick’s historic hand crafts. Article by: Kayleigh Ziolo
Opening Hours Mon-Sat: 10am-5:30pm, Late Thursday till 7pm (from 19th Nov) Sun: 2pm-5pm (from 22nd Nov) 9 Lower Cecil St. Limerick Tel: 061315668 E:info@limerickcrafthub.ie www.limerickcrafthub.ie
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Gemma Morris Kavanagh The artist and designer behind Morris Kavanagh Designs marries fine art and design with her unique collection of
totes, bags and purses. She tells Rebecca Egan about how she got started and the creative process. Have you always been creative?
I always had a creative flair, but it runs in the blood. Lots of my family are creative and involved in the arts in one form or the other. I have cousins who are sand
sculptors and are part of a big sand sculpting festival
in Dublin each year. I’m very lucky as well, I am one of the few artists with full parental support. When I was
deciding where to go to college they were completely behind me and always encouraged me to follow what my heart told me, and believe in what my hands and imagination could create.
Did you train in any form of design?
I did a PLC in Stillorgan after school and that really
helped me explore art and decide what avenue I
wanted to pursue. I had always loved fine art, it really
is a true passion of mine and I was delighted to be
accepted into LSAD to further my skills. I’m not originally from Limerick but really fell in love with
the city over my years in LSAD, I don’t see myself leaving. I completed a degree in fashion there, which is perfect for how I like to work. I was guided down
that path by the lecturers. Even the fashion course itself involved a lot of deadlines and is known to be
that bit more intense maybe than other major areas. It
suits me and I suit it, it is practical and functional and has a precise thinking about it, particularly the design elements and tailoring fits to exact measurements. What has kept you busy since college?
Oh plenty of things - I guess the main ones include working with Fidget Feet, and I ran my own
alteration and designs in Killaloe ‘Dress by Gemma’.
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That was great, it suited me well. I got plenty of
I love that I am a fashion designer and I have never
my technique, becoming much quicker in my work.
I have found a way to marry both passions. I have
business through word of mouth and really developed I earned a name which is always great and then I
started working in the bridal shop in Killaloe. That
was simply terrifying at the start! It needed a whole new skill set and with your wedding day being such an important celebration you always have to be so careful
about each single stitch. I then met Marion Murphy
Cooney, who is based in Nenagh. She needed an inhouse dress-maker so I found myself working with her. Between working with Marion and then the time
she spent in Limerick shops, I have seen four years pass.
lost my desire to pursue drawing and fine arts. Now
discovered a way to combine the two. It’s a dream! I have started making my own collection of bags and
cushions. I have selected a very specific colour palette for my first collection. I have a wide variety of bags from tote bags, purses, purse-clutch combos, larger
bags that some new mothers have said are great nappy
bags! A favourite of mine is the yoga bag: I made it
because I could never find a bag the right size for my yoga mat and a change of clothes. It’s all under
my name ‘Morris Kavanagh Designs’ and it sure is keeping me busy!
And what now?
Where does the design/ fine art element come in?
shop and with Marion, but I loved working for myself.
images from fashion magazines or ones I source
Well I really garnered my skills working in the bridal
I free hand-embroider portraits onto the bags. I use
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online, then I draw them onto canvas and use the
Is it difficult to source materials?
sew. It took practice! Then the canvas is used either as
mind. I wanted strong canvas, I get it from Ireland
machine to stitch the design, moving the fabric as I
Not really, I’m lucky that I had a particular idea in
a main panel in the bag or is sewn on to a panel- it
Canvas, such a lovely guy runs the shop and I’ve
depends on the portrait and on the bag! I use pastel
bought stuff since my LSAD days there. It is great to
colours mostly but with a pop of a bright colour here
support local. I get the leather from the saddlery on
and there, again, depending on the individual product.
William Street and the zips I order but dye myself for
I’ve worked in many different areas and with many
that bright lime colour.
different people, between those I mentioned already and even time I had sharing a studio with Emma
Where do you see yourself in five years time?
Lime Tree, so it is nice to be working for myself again.
in various retailers and develop my products further,
Fisher by the Milk Market and working with the
Oh that’s a tough one! I would love to have my product developing new ranges. This isn’t something I want to
How long have you been designing these products?
rush though. I want to do it right, I recognise that it
Not for long at all, just a few months, but working
will take time to build my product and I’m excited to
alone is demanding too, particularly when you’re
see what the future brings. I definitely want to build
trying to build up stock. It’s great to have the freedom
on the current designs and bring in an element of
to test out new ideas and I have orders coming in for
quilting somehow. It’s all to be discovered!
Christmas gifts since October, which is fantastic!
Now you have told us about these great hand-made
You work from home, is that a good thing or a bad
(in Limerick no less!) products, where can we get
thing?
them?
Both! (Laughs). You certainly need to have good
If you follow me on Social Media you can contact
self-discipline. In college fashion seemed to have
me directly to place an order, that’s my main way
a lot more discipline than other fields so I am well
at the minute. You can also see the whole range of
trained from the practice there. You need to be able to
products I have designed there too. I’m on Facebook,
close the door of your workroom and lock out all the
then @morriskavanaghdesign on Instagram and @
temptations of getting the housework done, making a
phone call or playing with your dogs, it can be tough. Equally, you need to be able to close the door to the
workroom and leave it rest so you can do all the house chores and live life. It is great to have everything close and to be your own boss, once you find the balance!
What has drawn you to create these bags? Why now?
I have always wanted to tie my things together, fine art and design, and now just felt right.
MorrisKavanagh on Twitter. I’m also selling in the Who do you target your product at?
That’s so tough to figure. I would say anybody, it is
Craft Hub in Limerick and I should hopefully be found at many Christmas markets.
a practical product, stylised but with a broad appeal. Tote and embroidery, I guess the main market would
be women aged 20-40. The bags are multi-purpose and the cushions are fashionable and comfy. All
products are easily maintained and cleaned. The target
market is anybody that needs a bag or would like a cushion really! (Laughs).
Article by: Rebecca Egan
Photography by: Leanne Aherne
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Th e li me rick magazine
Mus i c Name: Adam Sixs
I tend to get bored quickly if I’m stuck playing the
From: North West London originally, moved to
it up. I guess the main theme that runs through the
Age: 28
Ireland when I was 6 and have been based in Limerick for the last 10 years.
How long have you been a DJ?
I started mixing at home around 2008, with my first gig in 2009 sometime.
What first got you interested?
My early teenage years were spent listening to garage
like So Solid Crew, Oxide & Neutrino and MJ Cole
but that all seemed to disappear in the early 00s and my taste moved on to bands and more kind of out-there electronic music. It was actually several
years later when I was reading an article about this ‘strange, new genre’ called dubstep that had evolved
from garage that I started to pay more attention to
electronic music again. I quickly fell in love with what was going on in the scene over in the UK and after a couple of years just listening to tunes I felt I had to get involved and started to teach myself how to mix. First gig?
I played a lot a bar gigs when I was first starting but my first club gig was in Baker Place for a night called
Sweatbox back in 2009. It was me and Deadlybuzz playing back to back for the night and the place was
packed so I was bricking it! The night went well anyway and from there it all kicked off and I started
getting invited to more and more gigs around the city. Type of music you play?
I don’t really have one single genre that I play, my sets tend to flick between bits of everything, from hip
hop to garage to techno to dubstep to whatever else.
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same thing for a whole set so I’m constantly changing music I play though is the contrast between dark and light: Dark heavy bass and loose shuffles and funky rhythms.
Who have you collaborated with?
I did a remix for Limerick band Fox Jaw at the end of last year for their single Falling Debris which
was released on 7”. Apart from that I’ve mostly
been working on solo beats recently. No plans at the moment for putting anything out there yet but it’s something I’m hoping to focus on in the new year. Preferred weapon of choice?
I don’t actually have a proper setup at home, only a battered turntable and mixer but in the club I use either turntables or CDJs with Serato. I just love
having my entire library of music at my fingertips
while I’m playing, I usually only have a few key tunes planned out for a set and fill in the rest as I go along. Where have you gigged?
Outside of the regular nights in Limerick, I’ve played
for Elemental in Clare, Subsession & Nancy Schnare down in Cork, Chow Down in Manchester and have played at a bunch of various LSAD events and random one-off parties.
Where can we catch you next?
You can catch me on the second Thursday of every month at Gutter in The Underbelly at The Blind Pig and the third Thursday at Dolan’s Warehouse for D.I.E.
Article by: Olivia Chau
Photography by: Eoghan Lyons
Article by: Olivia Chau
Photography by: Eoghan Lyons
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Sa m e D4E nce In a society that seems to be on the up after what has been
Tell me how you first formed Same D4Ence? Did
Rap and Hip-Hop seem to be gaining popularity in
and rap have also been on the increase around Ireland.
Well firstly, before we became the group known as
of years. Is it because it’s a genre that more and more
classed as one of the worst recessions of our time, hip-hop
Our country has always been seen as a small talented
island with amazing talent amongst the rock scene, with bands such as The Cranberries, Thin Lizzy, The
Villagers, Ham Sandwich, Windings, Shardbourne, Walking on Cars, and, And So I Watch You From Afar. Rap or Hip-Hop always enjoyed more of an
underground scene but in the last few years, more and more acts are gaining popularity around our small
island. And it would seem that most of the talent is coming out of Limerick too. With Rusangano
you all grow up together?
Same D4Ence, the three of us grew up together in The Island Field, in Limerick. We were close as
younger friends and became closer over the years. I started writing at a very young age and told the boys
about it. After that, MC B and Hazey Haze started
to build an interest in writing and soon the three of us were rapping and writing in families’ coal bunkers
and sheds. It wasn’t until about 2013 when Same D really came together as a group to develop and create our music.
Family and Naive Ted garnering attention from
Were you always into Rap and hip-hop?
other groups were jumping out of the woodwork and
young age and since then we’ve been listening to
the Irish media, it was only a matter of time before blowing us away with their unreal talent. One group that immediately stands out and should grab your
attention is Same D4Ence (or Same D! as they are referred to amongst the music community).
Same D4Ence consists of Size, Hazy Haze, and
MCB and have only been a part of Limerick’s scene
We were all into Rap and Hip Hop since a very
music by people like Eminem, DMX, 2Pac, 50 Cent,
several memorable shows around Limerick and will
be taking the show on the road around Ireland soon. In the meantime, Olivia got chatting with Simon aka
Size about being in Same D, growing up in Limerick, and their opinions on what goes on around the city.
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and is impacted by people who listen to different things, and at different times.
It is now being greatly noted in the Limerick and
Ireland and I think that before musicians in this genre were not getting themselves out there and not
being ‘’seen’’ by an audience enough. But honestly, the
music that has come out over the last 2 years has been especially good. Not to blow our own trumpet too
much, but we have made an impact as you said, and we are very proud of our style of music and the work put into creating it.
that was deeply affected by the recession and our
we could mention! Hip-hop and music have always been a massive influence in our lives.
Limerick musicians, how does it feel to be part of
by mynameisjOhn and Naive Ted. They have had
and it is connected and influenced in so many cultures
5’9, Passionate MC, Flawless and a whole lot more
Yelawolf, G Mo Skee, Slaughter House, Royce Da
it, making the walls sweat from the heaving crowd now called ‘Basic Instinct’ that features production
Well, Hip Hop and Rap has a wide variety of sound,
Would you class yourselves as angry young men or
Same D4Ence are relatively new to the music scene
who couldn’t get enough! They have an EP out
people can relate to, especially for your generation?
The Game, Tech N9ne, Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole,
since 2014 but in that time, they stormed onto the stage at Make a Move Festival and absolutely killed
Limerick and Ireland in general over the last couple
but you’ve made a massive impact with a lot of the music community?
It feels great! To have people like Naive Ted and
Rusangano Family supporting you is incredible. Also, we have to mention out extended family, DJ DShii, and rappers Bubbha Jay & Dred. It’s a business founded on friendship and love for music.
acutely observant about life growing up in a city severely high suicide rate?
Well, to be honest, I would have to say both. We are constantly noticing and discussing things that are
happening around us, and seeking the answers so we can express our point of views. Having said that, as
you hear in our music, yes we display a lot of anger, from events that play out in Limerick to issues around
the world. We feel anger, annoyance and sadness towards how things are handled around the city and
country. Of course our music is our expression, art and message we use and love to demonstrate what we really think of the matters that affect others and ourselves every day.
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As a group, you have a good platform to talk about life in Limerick, what message are you trying to convey to your audience?
Well of course there is no one answer to that question. We’ are trying to show people how to break the cycle. Why should we be pigeon holed as one thing or another, or why should be stand back when something
happens? Our message is to fight for yourself and
your loved ones. It’s all about the power of speech! Use your words!
You recorded your EP ‘Basic Instinct’ with mynameisjOhn and Naive Ted, and released it in
September. Tell me about recording and releasing the EP - I love the Traditional music mixed with beats that you have in a few of your songs. Do you
think it’s time that it was recognised in the Rap/ Hip-Hop community worldwide?
Oh yeah, definitely! The progress over the last few years was immense and now people all around have
found themselves as artists more, and are now ready again to do something great!
No-one could say Same D4Ence won’t be big! To
quote Hazey Haze ‘’I will die a f***** legend in the future... Better believe, I put my life on that.”
Article by: Olivia Chau
Photography by: Eoghan Lyons
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
De l or e nto s Dublin band Delorentos are taking a back to basics
What memories stand out to you Kieran from over
It’s great that we can do it - Ró is a native speaker
have no interest in the frills frippery and bombast that
The Artic Monkeys?
another way to interpret our stuff. It’s great that we
approach to music. Their musical biography declares they
occupy other bands, and it’s an ethos that seems to be paying off. They have three critically acclaimed albums
under their belt, and are in the middle of their acoustic Irish tour, Home Again. TLM caught up with the lads
before they hit Limerick’s Lime Tree Theatre on 12th December.
You guys have been together for ten years now, you
the years? How about performing with Bell X1 or It’s all relative to what stage we are at in our careers I
guess. We played with the Artic Monkeys a few times
Naturally your sound has evolved over the years, it
Springsteen has such a large following, his ‘fandoms’
more acoustic, what drove you guys to develop your
support act for Bruce Springsteen too. It was crazy, were even contacting us saying they approved us to play before he came on stage.
Being the first unsigned artists to ever play at
funny stories to share?
been some feeling! Was it difficult to get your names
There is an endless list of stories to tell with some unexpected twists we met that we will always look
back on and think ‘that was crazy!’. We played a gig at an international venue and the ground was so hot our
shoes melted, the soles of our shoes just disappeared! Another memory I will always cherish is when we
went out to Haiti to help with the relief work after Hurricane Katrina. We were rebuilding houses and
providing entertainment for the victims in shelters.
Oxegen and Electric Picnic back in 2006 must have out there as unsigned artists or was there a gap in the market for your sound?
a tiny basement in Memphis, on St. Paddy’s day, we
weren’t supposed to be playing but said for the day
We can top our last release. That’s what keeps us
going, constantly trying to do better, and we’re lucky we’ve had the support of our fans.
a group or more on an individual basis?
has an idea they play it, we discuss it and another
and ourselves - that’s why we’re always trying new things I guess!
own label ‘Delorecords’. Would you guys ever sign You know, it’s any idea we have toyed with a lot and
we would never rule it out for the future, but when you want to do something like that you have to
commit so much time to it. It wouldn’t be right to sign somebody if we didn’t have the time to commit to them. Someday, maybe, but for now, we are happy to keep gigging and writing and evolving.
be open to new suggestions or ways to rework a song
you away?
would sound better in a particular way. We’d always from its initial inception.
of our heavier stuff and there was such a wild vibe, like
Well we have a good few songs translated to Irish,
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instruments. We always want to surprise our audience,
You have always done well at award ceremonies, is
Ye seem to have a passion for Gaeilge, where did
wild animals. That was the best craic!
the same words with different feelings and different
one of us may have heard it differently, or thought it
that’s in it why not. We were en route from NY to Texas and played with a blues band. We played a lot
that we are reimagining songs in a new acoustic way;
another band or artist?
Well it differs a lot, most of the time when somebody
is one gig that stands out for me though: it was in
Well I wouldn’t say that we’re going acoustic, more
the drawing board it feels like we can still do better.
We are four albums in but every time we sit back to
Obviously gigging and playing concerts is your life,
No gig is ever more or less meaningful to us. There
sound in this way?
All you albums bar the last were produced by your
You are all songwriters, do you write collectively as
you for a particular reason?
started out with a sense of punk/ pop but now it is
We have always been headstrong anyway! (Laughs).
That was unforgettable.
but is there any one performance that stood out to
can tap into it, it’s our culture too.
in Malahide Castle, which was amazing. We were
must know each other like the back of your own
hand and have many stories to tell, do you have any
and when he translates things it proves there is even
that come from?
we all know them and can sing them, like Sanctóirí
(Sanctuary) and Gunnaí ar bith (Bullet in a Gun).
there any nominations or awards that really blew Well it’s always a great feeling to be nominated and
even better to win - you know you’re doing something
right! When Little Sparks won Irish Album of The
Year with the Meteor Awards in 2013, that was… words cannot describe it really, we were so delighted!
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What other roles have you gotten to assume as a band member?
Well making the videos gives us cool creative
opportunities. I’ve produced some videos, Níal directed one, it’s a great experience! And you guys sell vinyl now too?
Yes! People didn’t have an interest before but now it
is really growing in popularity again, so it’s class to have that as an option. We put a lot of thought into
it too, the artist is Matt and Emelie or M&E Art & Design from Sweden, we really wanted it all to be the
absolute best! It was recorded and produced by Rob
Kirwan, so all people we have full faith in and who share our vision.
You played mainly at festivals when in Spain, is the vibe much accelerated at a festival gig compared to a concert?
Every gig is so different, no two are ever the same - that’s why we do it! SOS festival in America was formidable two years back. Then on the Spanish tour our song ‘Care For’ was so popular because it was played in a TV advert and was theme tune to the festival so the reaction was unbelievable. We were
playing in front of 25,000 people, a small towns worth
of people, it was euphoric! Ross sings the track on the album but I sang it that day and it’s something I’ll never forget.
What is the feeling in the camp now before your Home Again tour this November and December?
Well we’ve been setting it up a while now, really got stuck into organising the set in September, the whole
process is so exciting! Each gig will have different people joining us as special guests, but all gigs will
have the same personality. We have a big set list but we’re leaving room to rotate tracks so if we get a tweet
or request from the audience we can put it on the list in advance. Technology is great that way, it enables us to engage with our fans so much more and play to
songs are reimagined with a more acoustic sound. We think it will surprise a lot of people!
their needs.
Finally, you have labelled this your ‘most
You seem so appreciative of your fans…
consider it so?
You’ve got to be! That’s why we do use technology
to their and our favour - you want them to get their money’s worth, they could be off doing anything they
please that night, but they choose to come and see us. We want to make it worth their while, we want it to be an experience they will always remember.
You chose a lot of theatres rather than concert halls, why?
We are in lots of theatres for the Home Again tour. It
is a concert tour, that’s why we are in theatres not gig
venues. It’s not going to be a heavy or wild experience, more a rousing experience. There will be moments you will hear a pin drop. We want to present the set
and the tour as an experience. As we said, a lot of our
adventurous and ambitious tour yet’. Why do you
Well we really will be outside of our comfort zone. Lots of people coming will have been to our electric gigs, they won’t ever have seen us in this light. But we’re excited and can’t wait to bring it to all the
venues in the small and larger towns of home! We’re told that Limerick audiences are great too, so we’re
looking forward to our gig in the Lime Tree Theatre on the 12th of December.
I’ve heard that before, and we’ll take the compliment! Go n-éirí libh ar an dturas, see you soon Delorentos!
Article by: Rebecca Egan
Photograph by: Mark Duggan
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Music g en e ration
Ahead of their ISPCC Childline Benefit concert taking
of great benefit to me. Everybody working there is
take a look at the work of Music Generation and how it
inspiring.”
place at the Millennium Theatre on November 21st, we supports new music talent in Limerick.
There’s no doubt that Limerick is a city bursting
with musical talent. Anyone who visits the city is
immediately welcomed by buskers at every corner, each one more talented than the next, bringing life and soundtrack to the city of culture. You needn’t
walk far to find musical talent in Limerick. They’re scattered all over the city, from the Milk Market to Cruises Street we have singer-songwriters, accordion
and banjo players, and of course plenty of DJ and rappers.
In recent years, Limerick has become one of the many counties to introduce the Music Generation programme (Co-funded by U2). The aim of this
programme is to inspire like-minded young people to make music and collaborate with one another to
create something new and unique. Music Generation Limerick
gives
young
musicians/bands
the
opportunity to get studio time, create music videos
and get gigs around the city in local venues like Dolans, Lava Javas Youth Café and more.
One of the musicians on this programme is young Producer & DJ, David Wallace. Inspired by an array
of different artists such as Grimes, Aphex Twin and
Tchami, David began making music at the young age
of fourteen. Now he produces many styles of music
ranging from Electro, Dubstep and Deep House, constantly experimenting with local artists around
him and trying out new projects. Recently David
has begun working on hip-hop production with local talented rappers he met through Music Generation
Limerick. He says of the programme: “It has been
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very passionate about music and I find them very
Music is one of the most effective creative outlets for
young people. It helps them excel academically and
improves focus, according to studies. Having a passion for music, or any creative art form opens up a whole new community for teenagers to immerse themselves
in and meet like-minded people - especially in a
city like Limerick, where there are programmes and workshops geared towards young people running
throughout the year, encouraging them to embrace their creative side and share their talents.
Music Generation Limerick’s Reach Out initiative is
a continuation of that ethos, with three main projects: using music to literally reach out to vulnerable
young people and support a service that helps them, strengthening the connections with Limerick’s musical community worldwide, and reconnecting with Limerick’s musical past. The Reach Out ISPCC
Childline benefit concert will feature a mixture of much loved Limerick music acts including Kathleen
Turner, Limerick Voices and Liam O’Brien. The event will connect the Limerick Diaspora as it will
be streamed to Limerick communities internationally, as well as featuring musicians from across the globe
performing live at the concert via video link. Finally, there will be a major research project to tie in with 1916 centenary, looking at the Limerick music scene today and how it has evolved over the past 100 years.
For more information on Music Generation Limerick and Reach Out, visit:
www.musicgenerationlimerickcity.com
Article by: Christine Costello
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Ri v e ri ne exhibition A quiet, yet powerful revolutionary movement is
Maurice Gunning, who is photographer in residence
“We were talking to women who knew of female
Gambia, to protect and nurture female health and
UL. recently spoke to TLM to tell us the background
Cutting, as it also known, is a complex issue. Some
underway throughout the small African nation of The sexuality across the country. Limerick photographer
Maurice Gunning, and his partner Alice McDowell
wanted to bring the quiet revolution to a wider audience, in a thoughtful, yet impactful manner. So, with the
support of the Simon Cumbers Media Fund, Maurice Gunning and Alice McDowell travelled to The Gambia
in early 2015 to create RIVERINE: 9 Stories from The Gambia. It will be one of the largest photographic exhibitions in Ireland this year with 65 prints presented at the Hunt Museum.
In the series of intimate photographic portraits, this fascinating exhibition explores the physical and internal
landscapes of nine women: utilising interviews and
ambient recording from their homes in The Gambia.
at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at behind the trip and the stories of these incredible trailblazing women. How did it all begin?
“Alice had already spent some time in The Gambia,
“We travelled with the assistance of a Gambian
much of a leap it must be to make the decision to
2014, we set off in May 2015,” Maurice explains. community organisation, who connected us with a local community ambassador. The women we spoke to were situated in very rural villages, surrounded only
leave that behind and go against what is essentially seen as a rite of passage in a woman’s life.
Absolutely, says Maurice. “It’s been a part of the
in isolation in the country, you begin to see why the
just the declaration that it is wrong.” A Symposium
you realise just how many of these rural areas exist practice has continued as it has, and why there is such a drive to raise awareness to eradicate it.”
FGM, in rural parts of practicing countries like The
a religious and cultural obligation.
practice is still ingrained in societies, and just how
by desert. It was often difficult to travel, and when
However, as custodians of the tradition, their actions to communities: as female circumcision is widely regarded as
years old, others claim it pre dates the Qur’an.”
With that in mind, we start to understand why the
The practice of female circumcision, more commonly
cease this practice have not always been embraced by their
say it’s religious, some say cultural, some say it’s 1000
and after successfully applying for funding in
These women have made the life-changing decision to
abandon the traditional practice of female circumcision.
circumcision not just from a victim perspective.
referred to here as female genital mutilation or Gambia, is often carried out shrouded by secrecy, without sterilisation or anaesthetic, and using crude
non-medical instruments. Worldwide, it is estimated that 120 million women and girls have had FGM
practiced on them, so it’s by no means an isolated issue. The subject is of huge concern and has been
gaining much attention in recent years with global campaigns led by organisations such as the UN, The
fabric of these societies for so long, it takes more than
for Religious Leaders and Medical Personnel on FGM as a Form of Violence was organised by the
Inter-African Committee on Traditional Practices
Affecting the Health of Women & Children of The Gambia, GAMCOTRAP. This resulted in the Banjul Declaration of 1998, which stated that the
practice has neither Christian or Islamic origins or religious justifications and condemned its continued
practice. Alongside this, BAFROW (the Foundation for Research on Women’s Health, Productivity & Development) began working with local communities
on an alternative rite of passage project for girls in 1996.
Guardian newspaper, Equality Now, and Amnesty
Maurice tells us: “The Gambia as a country is
Gunning and McDowell’s project is remarkable and
steps to put a halt to FGM – they have set a target
International.
particularly thought provoking, as it is providing a perspective we don’t often see. The duo photographed
and interviewed women who not only had the practice carried out on them, they actually were practitioners.
remarkable in that this tiny nation is taking massive to eradicate the practice by 2020 and are well on the
way to achieving that aim. That said, it’s still not easy
for anyone who wishes to turn away from that part
of their culture – women still face being ostracised.
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For the women we spoke to, it was their only means
retrained with the help of organisations that help
years, a couple of them only in the last year or so. So
one woman learned pottery and now sells clay pots,
of income. Most of them had stopped in the last five this exhibition is largely the story of what happened after, what they did to remove themselves from the
life they had known. They had to stay strong in their own beliefs and find a means to survive.”
How did they make such a huge step? “Many of them
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individuals into alternative employment. For example,
themselves, but for many others the only way to do that is to leave everything behind.”
another got a grant of $100, and with that bought
With so much debate raging about asylum seekers
young men to make it for her and runs the business.
something else Maurice had in mind when putting
a stove and began making bread - she now employs While another bought a fridge freezer and began selling bags of ice. They are making another life for
and European countries response to refugees, was that the exhibition together?
“Of course it is an underlying issue, but it’s something
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not really discussed explicitly in the exhibition. We do feel it’s important to realise that many women are
seeking asylum to escape FGM, but we’re not actively trying to make a point, we just hope that by sharing
these individual experiences it makes people consider the individual lives behind the broader issues we hear
about in the media. We didn’t want to make this a campaign or push any agenda, Riverine is a gentle
narrative, we just wanted as much as we could to relate what the women had told us in the way that
we heard it. We wanted to present their stories, not
with any imposed narrative or angle, just a poetic and
visual representation of their lives after FGM, and show that there can be positive outcomes.”
Through dialogue and advocacy with religious scholars and the district chiefs of the villages which stretch
from the Upper River Region of The Gambia to its meeting with the Atlantic, local organisations have
begun to eradicate this practice from the country. The
nine women and their stories presented in Riverine, illustrate how combining the elements of custom and tradition with education and knowledge, great
change can come about for a country and its people. All nine women are forging a new life and livelihood for themselves, and most importantly, a new future for women in The Gambia.
The exhibition will be formally opened by Professor
Michael O’Flaherty, Director of the Irish Centre for Human Rights, on Tuesday 24th November at 6pm in the main gallery, The Hunt Museum, Limerick. RIVERINE: 9 Stories from The Gambia
Exhibition open daily from Monday 23rd Nov Sunday 29th November.
Mon-Sat 10am-5pm, Sundays 2-5pm. Article by: Kayleigh Ziolo
Photography by: Maurice Gunning
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Opinion: Rebelle relates her experience of joining the Abortion Bus Pro Choice event in Limerick…
Truth be told, I have limited experience when it
comes to activism. Apart from the occasional pride
parade my activism is what could be described as
armchair based, at best. I write and share articles, pictures and information pointing out injustices as
well as signing the odd petition. However when I
heard that the “Abortion Bus” was coming to town, I knew it was something I had to stand with. It’s important to remember as you reading this article that I am staunchly Pro-Choice. Pro-Choice does not
mean Pro-Abortion, it simply means that I support a woman’s right to make whatever choice is right for them about their own bodies.
Ireland has one of the most restrictive abortion laws
in the world. This is underpinned by our Constitution, which protects prenatal life on an equal footing with the life of the woman. Ireland only allows women and girls access to abortion if their life is at risk, and even
this is not a guarantee, as we have seen in the Savita
case. In all other cases, abortion is a crime punishable by up to 14 years in prison. Irish healthcare providers are effectively gagged from giving out full information
about terminations, for fear of being accused of “promoting” or “advocating” it – a crime that carries a
fine of up to €4,000. Instead of receiving information from a medical practitioner women are forced to trawl through the dark recesses of the internet in the
hopes that they might find some accurate and safe information. In the year 2015 women are being forced
to scurry around in secret, hiding their problem for fear of being prosecuted. As if Ireland hasn’t learned
enough lessons about the dangers of having people
keep secrets and living with fear and lies, but I digress. The bus was organised by the group WomenOnWeb. org. Women on Web is a digital community made up of women who have had abortions and individuals
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as well as organisations that support abortion rights. Women on Web is an international collective that
answers thousands of help-emails every day in many languages from women around the world. As Women
on Web helps women in very many countries, there
is no phone number to their helpdesk, but they will respond to every email and will provide support.
The bus travelled around Ireland for two days offering
information on how women could obtain abortion pills, as well as consultations with Women on Web
founder Dr Rebecca Gomperts. The bus stopped in
Dublin, Cork, Limerick and Galway for rallies and
demonstrations protesting the eighth amendment, which bans abortion in Ireland. I took part in the
Limerick leg of the bus tour. When I arrived to our
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meet up location on Thomas Street I was surprised
whatever he saw fit but I did not think it was fair that
While we are at it, amending the eighth isn’t enough.
large gathering of mainly older men, teenage girls
over their own bodies. However, when he referred
autonomy and for too long. We need to join the
by the size of the Anti-Choice group. There was a
accompanied by one or two priests in full garb, chanting loudly and carrying professionally printed banners and signs. They were really a sight to behold compared to our smaller gathering, carrying our home
made signs and chatting to passers-by about the bus and what was happening.
It was all quite a peaceful affair until one of the AntiChoice side produced a sign that read “I don’t support
Lenin or Hitler or Stalin or ‘The Death Bus’”. A woman passing by myself and a friend asked us to
confirm what the sign said and she became quite upset. She told us that she was Jewish and found the
sign very offensive. The woman proceeded to cross
his belief system should impact on women’s rights to rape and forced pregnancies as a woman’s burden
much like conscription to the army was for men then
I had to call an end to the conversation. I wasn’t sure what to expect from the day but I certainly wasn’t expecting to be shoved and shouted at. I would like
to say this was an isolated incident but another lady
I spoke to told me that she and a number of others had holy water thrown on them. This group promote themselves as being pro-life, pro-woman and probaby. I sincerely struggle to figure out how any group
can consider themselves pro anything when they have such aggressive tactics and are so negative in their approach.
the road to Bedford row and had a lengthy discussion
The simple reality is that abortion restrictions don’t
it away.
When the bus arrived onto O’Connell
forced to leave Ireland each year to access abortion
became much louder and lasted the duration of the
month, so chances are you already know someone who
Coppinger and one of the founders of The Limerick
only an estimate and the actual figure could be much
over women were invited onto the bus to receive
when the travel abroad to the clinics. Some women
stood by the door of the bus waiting my turn to board,
women are made to feel ashamed and like criminals
to his collar approached me and asked if I wanted to
alive is utilising abortion as contraceptive, no woman
leaflets during the day and I responded the same to
into the clinic and no woman relishes the thought of
man began pushing against me repeatedly informing
and away from the comfort of their own home and
being used by the demons. I told him because I was
stories on the Woman on Web website will tell you
with the man holding the sign, who eventually put
eliminate abortions. About 4,000 women and girls are
Street the shouting from the Anti- Choice side
services in other countries. That is over 300 women a
speeches being given by members of ROSA, Ruth
has had to travel to avail of this service. This figure is
Family Planning Centre. When the speeches were
higher as some women do not give their Irish address
information and/or a consultation. At this point I
risk their health by seeking out unsafe alternatives. All
a man in a brown suit with a large silver cross pinned
for making this choice. I am fairly certain no woman
read his leaflet. I had been offered many Anti-Choice
enters into this decision lightly and no woman skips
all of the offers, a firm but polite no thank you. The
having to undergo such a traumatic event, in secret
me that there were evil forces at work and that I was
away from their support networks. The hundreds of
Pro-choice I fully supported his right to believe in
the turmoil women face even contemplating this issue
Enough limitations have been put on women’s bodily
countries across the globe who embrace a woman’s
right to choose. The problem is very real and very current and forcing it overseas does not make it go away. If you believe now is time for a change, contact your local councillors and tell them that you support
a woman’s right to choose. Visit WomenOnWeb.org to learn more about how you can support women in need. Also worth checking out is the documentary
Vessel, made by Women on Waves, the Dutch Pro Choice organisation.
Article by: Rebelle Haze
Photograph by: Munster Images
much less going through it.
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Christmas
g if t ideas
Let the Christmas shopping fun begin! These little luxuries
are perfect for Secret Santas, cousins, and Christmas stockings. Now all you have to do is figure out the big stuff…
For Women: The Body Shop Frosted Plum Shimmer Lotion
The Body Shop Frosted Plum Bath Fizzers
24 Carat Gold Bassbuds
Plum Shimmer Lotion, a lightweight moisturiser that
experience! Relax and indulge your body with The
leather bound gift box and will include complimentary
Shine all season long with The Body Shop’s Frosted
gives skin a touch of sparkle while leaving it feeling
and smelling softly-sweet. The opening notes of plum, grapefruit, and raspberry give this fragrance a fruity
punch, while its floral heart and musk base adds sophistication.
Transform bath time to an irresistibly fragrant
Body Shop’s Frosted Plum Bath Fizzers. The opening
notes of plum, grapefruit, and raspberry give this fragrance a fruity punch, while its floral heart and
musk base adds sophistication. Contains 10 bath fizzers.
BassBuds™ 24ct Gold earphones will arrive in a chic accessories and information including: • • •
•
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Leather carry pouch
3 Pairs of luxury memory foam replacement tips (S/M/L)
6 sets of hypoallergenic silicone and memory
foam in-ear tips in 3 sizes (S,M,L) and in 2 colours
Certificates of Authenticity
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For Men: Elemis Men’s Daily Moisture Boost 50ml
Elemis Men’s Energising Skin Scrub 75ml
RED5 Helium Levitate
Tree of A Thousand Virtues native to Polynesia
with this dynamic exfoliator, formulated with Marine
but has the capabilities to float and spin just like a
An exclusive blend of Green Tamanu Oil from the
and Cactus Cerus Flower helps soothe shaved skin, achieving an overall improvement in skin condition. A trio of Cirtus Oils decongests the skin, providing
day-long free-radical protection. Skin compatible, plant based natamilks of Chestnut and Bamboo
assist in restoring elasticity, suppleness and essential nutrients stripped away by shaving.
Recharge and prime the skin for a smooth shave, Phytoplankton in a Vitamin E base. The scrub rapidly
resurfaces, ‘polishes’ and brightens the skin, lifting
the facial hair before shaving and helping to prevent ingrowing hairs and blemishes. The skin is left feeling smooth, refined and deeply cleansed.
This incredible speaker is not only loud and powerful
magician from a Las Vegas show. There are no wires
here, no noisy fans, just pure, unfathomable magic... and a few magnets if we’re being completely honest. The Helium Levitate defies gravity by floating on an
invisible cloud of magnetic force creating the ultimate focal point for any room. You and your friends will
be truly mesmerized as the Helium Levitate floats and spins above its base whilst playing your music
with crystal clear sound through a high quality 3 watt speaker.
Article by: Cornelia O’Riordan
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Th e li me rick magazine
Fas h i o n Winter Survival Style Guide Getting dressed in the mornings is becoming a cold
and miserable task (as if it wasn’t enough of a struggle already). The realisation that Winter is here has settled and we have to come to terms with the fact
TOPSHOP Faux Fur Contrast Collar Patterned Coat €125.00
Can we just take a minute to appreciate how beautiful this is? Everything about this coat is perfection. The colouring, the fur.. I can’t even.
that its freezing and were probably going to have a head cold for the next 3-6 months.
Yes our skin might dry out, our lips might chap and
our noses may run (constantly), but on the plus side, we get to wear faux furs and leather pants and look ‘Cruella Di Vil’ fabulous for a couple of months - so I for one, am not complaining too much.
Winter is my favourite time of year when it comes to fashion as I love layering clothes and AW15 is all about layering…and fur. LOTS of fur. I’ve picked out some casual/glamourous pieces from our most
loved high street shops to give you guys some Winter Wardrobe Inspiration.
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Check Belted Wide Cropped Trousers €76.00
These trousers are so effortlessly chic. They are styled perfectly for Winter above, with a white turtle-neck and black fur gilet.
BRAT A-Line Skirt By Motel €38.00 I think a print skirt is a must for Winter and I am
OBSESSED with this colouring and print. Pair with
a black turtle-neck and black knee-highs and you got a pretty glam outfit.
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with Shauna Lindsay Instagram - @shaunalindsay
RIVER ISLAND Grey Check Wool-Blend Sleeveless Jacket €113.00
Black Sequin Embellished Molly Jegging €80.00
anything and just looks so chic. I’ll definitely be
Especially at Christmas time. These are a MUST for
This is just so gorgeous. It would go with absolutely
Christmas is coming and who doesn’t love sparkle?!
purchasing this piece for my wardrobe.
me.
Cream Geometric Faux Fur Trim Dress €60.00 The Fur Trim just completes this.
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Th e li me rick magazine
Beauty
with Mary Kiely
Perfecting Eyelashes Make Up Artist Mary Kiely explains how to keep your
eyelashes thick and fluttery for all your flirtatious needs… We’ve seen an increase of false eyelashes and eyelash extensions over the past couple of years. Using these
all the time has a big effect on your eyelashes, so its
best to save them for only special occasions. With the right products, you can achieve amazing results every day with your very own eyelashes.
Eyelashes can be very sensitive so we need to look
after them. Not looking after them leads to eyelashes falling out, and it can take up to seven or eight weeks for them to grow back. Constant pulling on the
eyelashes and frequent fall-out leads to permanent damage.
Having naturally good eyelashes is great, so looking after them and keeping them strong is necessary. If
you have short, weak or very little lashes here are some tips to help…
1. Treating the eyelashes is the most important part
to support the eyelashes natural renewal cycle. For eyelashes to regrow and get stronger a good treatment is needed. There are lots of products out there but
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my favourite and the one that most definitely works
centre that holds mascara, so from root to tip every
Serum. Its full of vitamins, botanicals and eyelash
with smaller eyelashes, the top of the brush is very
is Elizabeth Arden Prevage Eyelash and Brow conditioners that make the hair stronger and reduces
breakage. It can be used on the eyebrows too. It is fragrance, prostaglandin and colorant free, leaving the
lash is being coated. This brush is fantastic for anyone
neat so it very easy to get into all those hard to reach eyelashes. This mascara retails at €25.
eyelashes and eyebrows feeling longer, fuller, healthier
Diorshow mascara is one of the best and most
worth it if regrowth of the eyebrows or eyelashes is a
Dior decided to change the ingredients of this iconic
and thicker. It retails at around €100 - expensive but problem, it will most definitely fix it.
Another option is the Dior Lash Maximiser. It’s
a primer and treatment in one, instantly making the eyelashes volumised, with the benefits of daily lash care. It’s a fantastic primer and really makes a difference to the eyelashes by curling, thickening
and lengthening them intensely. The minerals in the maximiser are to promote plumping and eyelash growth. It retails at around €33-€35.
2. After treating and priming the eyelashes the next step is the mascara, here are some of my favourites at the minute:
M.A.C Upward Lash is MAC‘s latest mascara. It comes in the most amazing packaging, it looks like a
popular mascaras out there. 2015 was the year when mascara. The new formula gets between eyelashes and naturally thickens them without clumping. The
beeswax texture coats the eyelashes for that lash
extension effect, with an amazing smell from the wax. It also has a patented Airlock system which prevents the mascara from being in contact with air, keeping the mascara from drying out. The brush is a big size so for anyone with very small eyelashes it could get
messy, I would recommend this mascara for medium to long length eyelashes. Diorshow retails at €33.50.
Bare minerals Lash Domination does it all -
volumising, lengthening, thickening and separating. It’s a long wearing mascara and has a ProTwist180
wand that goes 180 degrees to curve around all the
eyelashes. As it is Bare Minerals there are no parabens or phthalate. Lash Domination retails at €22.
giant MAC lipstick! On the inside there a surprisingly
3. After applying all these amazing long-lasting
and curl straight away. The brush head has a hollow
day. Mascara needs to be taken off properly as the
small brush head but it gives fantastic volume, length
products, we now have to take it off at the end of the
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area and eyelashes are so sensitive, but we also need to
Clinique Take Off The Day Oil can remove anything,
Dior Instant Eye Makeup Remover is so gentle and
to be removed with good eye makeup removers. Here
skin, retailing at €29.
free so there is no residue left on the eyes. It retails at
remove any product gently. Good eye products need are a couple of my favourites…
and it’s not harsh on the eye area. It does eyes lips and
great for sensitive eyes or anyone with contacts. Its oil €31.50.
Article by: Mary Kiely
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Pro du ct review Th e Body Shop - Oi ls of Li fe - In te nse ly R e v i ta l i s i ng Faci a l Oil
Th e B o dy Sh o p - O i l s o f L i f e - I n ten sely R ev i tal i si n g G el C r eam
The Body S hop – Oi l s of L i fe – Twi n-Bal l Revi tal i s i ng Fac i al M as s ag er
How much is it?
How much is it?
How much is it?
The Body Shop have recently released their new
After using the Intensely Revitalising Facial Oil, this
To get the most out of all of the products in the
have infused seed oils from all over the globe in their
the products in this range, it is infused with oils from
products along with The Body Shop’s Oils of Life
€48.00
Oils of Life range. As the name may suggest, they
products so that you can get the best from around the world without going further than your local high-
street. These new age-defying products include black
cumin seed oil from Egypt, camellia seed oil from China and Rosehip seed oil from Chile, which not
only make your skin look great, but they also smell pretty great too.
€42.50
is the perfect product to follow up with. Just like all of around the world for the best results possible.
One of the first things that is noticeable about this product is that there are tiny little sparkles sprinkled throughout the moisturiser. They would be the
illuminating micro-pearls that The Body Shop added
to their product in order for it to hydrate the skin in the lightest, and prettiest, way possible.
If you’re worried by those stubborn lines and wrinkles,
The best thing about this product is that it’s perfect
of ageing after just four weeks. This is due to the
very heavy, greasy and sticky but this moisturiser isn’t
this product is for you. It has proven to reduce signs
three different seed oils which revitalise the skin and improve the skins elasticity and firmness.
for any skin type. Regular face creams can often be any regular face cream. As it’s a gel cream, it’s very
light compared meaning that it’s perfect for anyone
with oily skin. However, it’s still moisturising and
hydrating enough to be used by anyone with dry skin.
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€42.50
Oils of Life range, we recommend that you use the
Twin-Ball Revitalising Facial Massager for the best results possible. Just apply the product as usual and
use the Facial Massager to massage the product into
your face. Not only is this relaxing but it also helps to
reduce lines and wrinkles, increases the blood flow in your face and increases the skins elasticity. Article by: Sophie Butler
c.
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Fi lm BFI London Film Festival 2015: Five of the best Article by: Fernando Sanchez
Film lovers of the world will have been closely following one of the biggest events in the global film festival calendar that took place recently, the BFI London Film Festival. Now in its 59th edition, the event showcases pieces submitted by up and coming film makers from around the world. The organization behind the festival provides funding for talented new directors, enabling young authors to show their films to a wide audience. This year’s schedule packed in 240 films from 72 countries over 12 days. Here’s a pick of the 5 best and most intriguing films to come out of this year’s festival. Add them to your to-watch list.
The Lobster Odd and blackish comedy The Lobster brings together a bunch of singletons into a resort hotel. These people are then given 45 days to find love among their fellow loveless peers, or else they will be transformed into an animal of their choice and banished into the woods. Ireland’s own cinema poster boy Colin Farrell stars in this off-the-wall comedy, though Farrell’s trademark good looks have been cleverly erased by a paunch, a rather odd Father Dougal hairstyle, and a quirky looking moustache this time around. Former makeup model girl Rachel Weisz co-stars, along with John C. Reilly, Ben Whishaw, and Olivia Colman (of Channel 4’s Peep Show fame).
The Witch Fans of the horror genre will not be disappointed with The Witch. Though its title may be somewhat non-descript and vague, first time writer-director Robert Egger’s debut film certainly delivers where it counts. The Witch beautifully depicts the descent of a 17-century New England family into madness. While not a horror film in a true sense, The Witch has all the hallmarks of a supernatural thriller where nightmarish, blood-soaked visions haunt the family’s environment. There is a sense of religious ambiguity pervading The Witch’s 92-minutes running time, but a tale of
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morality it certainly is not. The Witch’s unsettling ideas and concepts will stay with you for quite some time after the film’s end.
The Assassin After a long 8-year absence from film making, Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien returns to full splendour with the beautifully shot historical martial arts epic The Assassin. Those expecting fast paced chop-socky kung-fu marathons need to look elsewhere. The Assassin is a slow paced. meditative movie with a martial arts backdrop. The film follows the tale of Nie Yinnian (played by Shu Qi), who was trained from the age of 10 by a nun, Jiaxin, (Sheu Fang-yi), to efficiently kill corrupt officials. During an assignment, Nie’s about to execute a man, but the presence of his young son prompts the assassin to spare the man’s life. After faltering in her prior immutable determination, Nie’s trainer sends her on a mission to rid the assassin of any lingering feelings of pity.
Ixcanul ( Volcano) This is definitely one for the hardcore fans of Latin American cinema only. Excruciatingly slow, Ixcanul explores the world of a girl who becomes pregnant in a remote house at the foot of a Guatemalan volcano. While the premise itself is outlandish enough, the movie goes on to explore a way of life up in the mountains which is alien to most of us, yet moving and hypnotic at the same time.
A Bigger Splash A romantic comedy of sorts, if you are into that kind of thing, A Bigger Splash is a tale of tangled love and lust between four people; rock star Marianne (impeccably played by the always hypnotic Tilda Swinton) and her lover (Matthias Schoenaerts), and Marianne’s ex, Harry (Ralph Fiennes), who comes along with his sultry young daughter Pen (Dakota Johnson). Of course, conflict ensues, and loyalties are put to the test. A Bigger Splash lacks originality, but makes for an enjoyable 100-odd minutes of mildly romantic comedy.
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se e the li ght Dance Limerick Light Moves Festival of Screendance
Do you believe that there is a strong screendance /
This year’s festival theme is ‘Peeling Away the
the highly successful inaugural event last year. This year
The presence of screendance in Ireland and
behind choosing this particular theme?
2015 takes place 19th-22nd November and follows
looks set to be even bigger and better with a whole host of eagerly anticipated screenings and events taking place throughout the weekend.
This being the second year of the festival, will you be introducing any new features that weren’t in the
dance film presence in Ireland?
internationally, is growing stronger and stronger - and
in fact Light Moves emerged as a response to that. Artists are embracing new technologies and taking
full advantage of the increased possibilities that film offers in the making of new and innovative work.
inaugural event?
What inspired you to arrange the festival in
screenings and installations and involves 92 artists.
Mary Wycherley and Jurgen Simpson are the founders
We have a strong programme which includes 55 In addition to the screenings and installations, we
also have a symposium featuring 24 speakers and a Screendance Lab for artists interested in delving into
the practical and aesthetic questions surrounding
the field of screendance. The Lab will provide
valuable time for both the emerging and experienced practitioners to engage with two leading artists in the field, Lucy Cash and Marisa Zanotti.
Also, as part of the screenings, Light Moves is collaborating with Carriageworks - Australia’s largest Arts Centre, who has commissioned a series of works
from 24 artists under the title 24 Frames Per Second. This year we are showing 10 of these works in various
venues, including Dance Limerick, Limerick School of Art & Design and an outdoor projection at
Lower Cecil Street. All of these works are European premieres, which is very exciting for Light Moves. What is the main focus of the festival?
The main focus of the Festival is on the trans disciplinary nature of dance film or screendance. It
is a hybrid art form involving choreographers, visual
artists, performance makers and filmmakers. The
festival aims to highlight the collaborative nature of
these roles and processes and to stimulate discussion and debate.
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Limerick?
and curators of Light Moves and are Limerick based.
Layers’ - what was the inspiration and meaning
This theme was chosen to invite people to explore the tendencies and scope of screendance. The festival opens up the possibilities for what screendance
is and how it expands the fields of dance and film. The symposium will bring 24 speakers from Europe, the US and Canada to share their experiences and
thinking on this theme with the audience. It will make for some very interesting debates and chats for all interested in finding out more!
When the City and County Council were preparing
Would you recommend the festival as being an all
me as Director of the then-newly established Dance
We were mindful of including young people in
for the City of Culture, Mary and Jurgen approached Limerick. Dance Limerick is a resource organisation
for professional dance practice and Light Moves is a festival responding to the newly developing practice
of dance film. The synergies were obvious and we were thrilled that City of Culture 2014 accepted our
proposal to fund this exciting new venture as part of its legacy strand of programming. 2014 was Light
Moves’ inauguration and it is the only festival of its kind in Ireland. It was always intended that Light Moves would continue and become embedded as
a national/international experience unique within
ages and family friendly festival?
the programme, not just as spectators but as active
participants. Children aged 3-6 can attend the Light Moves Little Kids Club, and those aged 7-11 years can attend Exploring Sound for Dance Film - both at
the Hunt Museum. We also have a screening session on Saturday morning showcasing films made by
students, including one by Limerick Youth Dance -
who are so very excited to premiere their film at Light Moves and have their families, friends and peers see
their creativity and what they made, on the big screen.
Limerick’s annual cultural calendar.
Where can we find out more information about the
What should we expect to see at the Light Moves
www.lightmoves.ie. Brochures can also be found in
Festival?
Many exhilarating variations of demonstrating the physicality of dance as presented on screen. Light
festival?
coffee shops, the library and other outlets throughout the city.
Moves is a festival of opportunities and audiences
Article by: Cornelia O’Riordan
as they see new and thought-provoking ways of
Tarr and Agnes Hranitzky, which will be screened as
will be surprised, challenged, provoked, and engaged combing performance and movement on screen.
Photograph: Turin Horse (2010), directed by Bela part of Light Moves festival of screendance
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
#e at i nli merick with Olivia O’Sullivan Twitter & Instagram: @eatinlimerick
What’s new on the Limerick food scene? OPENINGS… Recently opened is Lana Asian Street Food in Castletroy, its sister restaurant opened in Galway
earlier this year and has been enjoying great success so
it’s great to see the owners bring it near the University of Limerick to one of Limerick’s busiest suburbs.
And good news for Limerick’s own original Asian
street food concept Aroi, having opened a second
restaurant, they are now celebrating the opening of a third establishment just recently in Kilkenny.
Coming soon… we have heard whispers of a new
Italian restaurant called La Piatto opening in Grove
Island, Corbally, very soon, hopefully at the start of December. Keep an eye on the #eatinlimerick social media for further updates.
HAPPENINGS… Ireland’s ‘fermentalist’ and Limerick’s own food
writer/teacher Valerie O’Connor continues her
cookery classes with ‘Guilt Free Baking’ coming
up on December 3rd where you can learn to make delicious, grain free and gluten free breads and
cakes. All ingredients and equipment are supplied at
Hook & Ladder Cookery School on Sarsfield Street but book fast as numbers are limited to 12. Other
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classes taking place include Christmas with Chef
Keith Pigott, Mulled Wine & Festive Finger Food, Christmas Desserts, Christmas Baking, to name but a few. There are lots more with different cuisines, check
out hookandladder.ie to see the full list of classes available. Could be a nice Christmas gift for someone perhaps?
Garret’s craft butchers in Castletroy and Dooradoyle has started stocking Riot Rye Bake House sourdough bread by Joe Fitzmaurice in Cloughjordan. Commited
to “creating and actively fostering a culture of bread
without the use of industrial additives or chemicals” this bread is made using exclusively organic flours, natural and wild ingredients in a wood fired oven. Available at the Milk Market on Saturdays, and The
Urban Co-Op which opens on Thursdays (3-6pm), Fridays and Saturdays (12-4pm), and also in Eats of Eden on Thomas Street.
#GIBO - The Great Irish Bake Off on TV3 has two
TALKED ABOUT… Rachel Allen visited Rigney’s Farm in Curraghchase, Co Limerick for her RTE series Rachel’s Coastal
Cooking in which she also visited the home of Valerie O’Connor to do some fermenting and learn about the health benefits of this ancient traditional process.
The Limerick Strand Hotel featured in Georgina
Campbell’s selection of 10 Best Festive Breaks in Ireland for their Family Panto Package including
overnight for 2 adults and 2 children in a family room, delicious breakfast and tickets to the show.
La Cucina featured in 17 Irish Restaurants Outside
Dublin You Have to Visit Before You Die by Lovin Dublin’s chief Niall Harbison. This small eatery in
Castletroy continues to be loved around the country for their fresh Italian offering.
Circular Road and Claire Ryan from North Circular
Hampers & Festive Limerick Produce
on Sunday nights at 9pm to track their progress.
Of course retail businesses throughout Limerick will
Limerick contestants in Emer Hough from South
Road, now living in Fedamore, Co Limerick. Tune in
Dalton Greene of Canteen took part in the Irish Barista Championships in Dublin recently. Dalton
recently joined Canteen owner/chef Paul Williams as
both were invited to take centre stage at a discussion all about coffee during the Savour Kilkenny food festival.
be celebrating the season offering festive produce and
hampers. Limerick Craft Hub and Bobby Byrne’s
Food Shop are just two outlets you can find Limerick
produce for gifting, and local hospitality businesses such as the Limerick Strand Hotel offers hampers
of their Pantry Range at Christmas with festive
essentials such as Christmas puddings, mince pies, ham glaze and cranberry sauce with port.
LANA CASTLETROY Dublin Road, Castletroy, Limerick Phone: (061) 508 061 Email: castletroy@lanathai.ie
www.lanathai.ie
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L imeri ck f oo d At it’s best
applauded and would rival any of the new restaurants on
The Treasury Restaurant Marks 1 year in Business
‘’Overall, The Treasury provides a generous and equal
A beautiful addition to a growing foodie city - The
‘’The concept and execution of the food and service is to be the Dublin scene’’ – Sinead Deegan
measure of style and substance’’ – Kayleigh Ziolo
‘’My overall experience was of a modern restaurant
touching on the fine dining experience but in no way stuffy’’ –Nigel Dugdale
Treasury Restaurant first opened its doors to rave
reviews a year ago. Although the restaurant has only been open for twelve months it has most definitely
made its mark on the dining scene of Limerick. With not only fantastic food on offer but an inviting
atmosphere and captivating interior, there is no doubt that the Treasury has solidified itself as one of the best restaurants to visit in Limerick city.
The Treasury Restaurant is the perfect dining
experience, from the decadent decor designed by
owner Barry Kiely in collaboration with Alice
O’Farrell from Looking Glass Interiors, to the fantastic food prepared with passion and an intricate
attention to detail by head chef Derek Fitzpatrick and his team.
When Barry Kiely set about the task of renovating the
basement of 74 O’Connell Street into the beautiful restaurant it is today he made a point of keeping many of the historical features. It is the original features of
the basement along with the new additions to the decor that ensure you are transported into a relaxed
and intimate atmosphere, a far cry from the bustling streets of Limerick city centre.
During the year The Treasury Restaurant has been the recipient of a multitude of magnificent reviews.
It is clear that The Treasury Restaurant is a unique
addition to the food scene of Limerick city and is
guaranteed to have many more years of success ahead of it. Congratulations guys.
Article by: Cornelia O’Riordan Photography by: Tarmo Tulit
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Health & Wellbeing Winter immunity The cold and dark winter months are here, which
means we need to take particular care of ourselves. We need to think more about our immune system and how to keep it strong and protected.
The immune system is a very important mechanism
as it protects us from infection and toxins. So even
though you might want to stay in and lay by the fire you should do something that could strengthen your immune system.
Contrary to what we might think it has been proven
that staying indoors leaves you at a higher risk to catch a cold. So, first of all, changing your scenery
and getting outdoors will help your immunity. This seems very manageable, but we’re all guilty of making
the excuse of staying in because it’s rainy and windy, which could be fair enough if we were living in a different country, but let’s face it, we should be used to
that by now! All you need to do is dress appropriately
for the weather to stay comfortable and get outdoors, you will warm up once you start moving.
Secondly, start doing it today! Help keep your
immune system strong and don’t wait for that cold to catch you. Prevent future illness by being physically active and eating balanced nutrition daily.
If you are, or are just starting to become active and your daily diet is balanced, but you still find yourself
getting colds and flu easily then you must ask yourself, what I am doing wrong? Do I eat enough natural vitamins and minerals? Is my exercise intensity high
enough to bring up my heart rate daily? Do I enjoy it? Be honest with yourself to find the right answers.
The key for maintaining strong immunity is staying in
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harmony and in balance with your body, maintaining
immune system stay strong and healthy. After all it is
being physically active daily.
every day, without us noticing so let’s thank it and
a healthy weight while eating balanced nutrition and
Add small immunity boosters to your diet. Include simple remedies like hot water with lemon and honey or try eating a clove of garlic daily which will naturally
support your immune system. Your very intelligent
such an amazing mechanism that keeps us protected
support it simply by moving, eating well and listening to it.
Believe that you can heal your body and stick to a healthy lifestyle.
immunity mechanism needs your support to work
Immunity booster recipe
can take time. So believe and stick to healthy living,
Vegetable stew
properly, and to do that you need to heal it first which
being patient will grant you all health benefits. Your
Ideal for lunch, made in less than 20mins
stronger.
Ingredients
body will thank you and your immunity will become
Thirdly, try to eliminate stress. When we get stressed
•
our immune system shuts down until we calm down. If you are stressed one of the best ways to reduce stress
is exercise. You might have your own unique activity,
•
Vegetables:
Pepper, zucchini, celery
onion, broccoli, cauliflower, spinnach, tomatos, mushrooms, and any other vegetables of choice.
Beans or brown rice (if short on time use canned beans or boiled rice)
it could be simply a walk in the park or cycling, even
•
especially outdoors, it will clear your mind and make
Preparation
hiking if it’s possible. As long as you get moving and you feel happier.
•
Finally, don’t rely on supplements to boost your
immunity. The reason why we all react to foods/
stress/medication differently is because each one of
•
Tomato sauce/pasta
Lightly fry onion and zucchini together then add rest of the vegetables (that could also be steamed so that less oil is used)
Add tomato sauce or pasta with seasoning of your choice (chilli, pepper, paprika, tumeric, salt)
us has a unique immune system and that is why you
•
your immune system. There is no such thing! Instead
Benefits
don’t need to run after some pill that claims to boost
become more positive and thankful for what you have, become more patient and exercise to keep your heart healthy and eat well for the nutrition.
Our immune system is so busy fighting off infections
and toxins daily, the least we can do to support its
function is adapt to a healthy lifestyle and worry less. These small modifications will all help keep your
stick,
Finally, add beans of choice or boiled rice.
Help with digestion and keep you hydrated. Helps to reduce bad cholestrol, lower risk of heart disease
and promote good nervous and immune system as it is packed with vitamins and minerals. Will also help you with weight control.
Article by: Sintija Zorge
Photography by: Tarmo Tulit
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Poetry from s tanza s
Whispers By Michael McGrath Within starry blankets of the fall
And whittled reeds in slender hands, Our air is lost in fleet footfall
While roaming on these pastoral lands. Oh sing to the moon, my lovelies.
Warm children mumble in their beds As we row ferries out from Foynes, With cargos of the recent dead
Whose eyes are crossed with silver coins. Oh sing to the moon, my lovelies.
Encroaching from those darkest seas, We moor amongst their petty ways And spin our spools of trickery
For we know secrets of the grave.
Oh sing to the moon, my lovelies. Oh sing and tumble through this night; Yes, seep beneath tight window seams To blow upon weak candlelight
And weave old troubles through their dreams. Oh sing to the moon, my lovelies.
Oh sing to another streaming mist, Dance and ebb on morning’s rise. Leaving with a poisoned kiss Our icy lips upon their eyes.
Oh sing to the moon, my lovelies.
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Michael McGrath is an emerging Irish fiction writer who
has been published both nationally and internationally in journals such as Roadside Fiction, Writing Raw, The
Ogham Stone and most recently in the January 2015 edition of Literature Today. He achieved success in two categories at the University of Limerick Arts Awards 2014: 1st place in the Short Story category for his work
Entropy and 3rd in the Poetry section for The Trouble
With Atoms. He is currently completing his first novel. He works as a second level English teacher and lives in Cork City, Ireland.
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
t e k r a M k il M e h T @ s Christmas @ The Milk Market a Christm Colouring Competition
Choirs Competition
Best Dressed Stall
Christmas Dates
Select Christmas Markets from the 4th Dec with a full week of markets 17th to 24th. Further info at www.milkmarketlimerick.ie It will feature up to 60 stalls & shops. All packed with a wide range of artisan food, craft & gift possibilities, Christmas crafts & gifts, quality festive & speciality foods, collectables, bric-a-brac, toys, books, fashions, seasonal decorations & more!
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L ite ra ry review I’ll Be Home For Christmas – Roisin Meaney I’ll Be Home For Christmas is the third book in a series
set on the imaginary island of Roone off the coast of Kerry
by the number one bestselling author Roisin Meaney. Although this book is indeed part of the series all three books can also be read independently.
Meaney’s third instalment to the series focuses on the lives of two central characters, whose lives, up until
now have been totally different: Tilly, an Australian
teenager, and Laura, a stay at home mother living on
the quiet costal island of Roone. Both women live totally different lives, each with secrets and regrets are about to find out that they’re much more similar than anyone could have thought.
In the opening of the book it is December 22nd and Tilly is being issued her very first passport and is
preparing for a much anticipated trip, although it is
only she who knows of the trip’s true end destination. Meanwhile, on Roone, Laura is preparing her family for the festivities of Christmas, not knowing that
it would quite possibly be the most interesting and unexpected Christmas that she has ever seen.
Whilst Laura is living her life day by day going about her usual duties on the small island of Roone, Tilly is
travelling across the world, doing everything possible
to make it the small coastal Island by Christmas Day, though no-one knows that she’s on the way. Will there be room for an unexpected guest at Laura’s table
this Christmas? Tilly is soon to find out. A storm is heading for the island, but will peace be restored before the snow melts?
This wonderfully written story by Roisin Meaney tells
a tale of families and new-beginnings, the good, the
bad and the unexpected. It is a delightful read and
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certainly a book to have you marvelling in the true
essence and charisma of Ireland, as seen through the eyes of the Australian teenager Tilly. I’ll be home for Christmas describes Ireland’s charm and beauty
in an extremely heart-warming and loving way, a description that could only be formed by a true Irish writer such as Meaney.
I’ll Be Home For Christmas will have you glued to
the plot and thoroughly invested in the characters; it is a book you can’t put down. With new revelations
and plot twists hidden in each chapter it is most definitely a captivating read.
Roisin describes the essence and writing process of I’ll Be Home For Christmas in her own words:
“This book is the third in a series that I’ve set on Roone, an imaginary island off the Kerry coast. I never meant to write more than one Roone book, but when I’d
finished the first, One Summer, the characters refused
to go away, so I found myself returning to them a year
later when I wrote After the Wedding. ‘That’s that,’ I
thought - but again I couldn’t get the characters out of my head, so earlier this year I revisited Roone for the third.
Educating the future
INTRODUCING SECOND-LEVEL TEACHING PROGRAMMES AT MIC ST. PATRICK’S CAMPUS, THURLES
Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, is a university level College of Education and the Liberal Arts, serving the needs of a growing and diverse student population of over 3,500 students
UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMMES BA in Contemporary and Applied Theatre Studies: (MI001) *NEW BA in Liberal Arts: (MI004) B.Ed. in Primary Teaching: (MI005 and MI006) BA in Early Childhood Care and Education: (MI007) B.Ed. in Education and Psychology: (MI008)
INTRODUCING MIC ST. PATRICK’S CAMPUS, THURLES BA in Education, Business Studies and Accounting: (MI009) BA in Education, Business Studies and Religious Studies: (MI010)
I’ll Be Home For Christmas is the first of my books to be published for the Christmas market, so I’m really looking forward to seeing the reaction to it. Because of
the time of year in which it’s set, the book’s overriding
BA in Education, Irish and Religious Studies: (MI011) BA in Education, Irish and Business Studies: (MI012)
theme is families, and I deal with several aspects of
POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMMES
myself was introducing an Australian character who
Mary Immaculate College also offers a wide range of postgraduate qualifications up to and including Masters and Doctoral degrees in the Liberal Arts, and in Education.
family life, good and bad. The main challenge I gave travels to Roone in search of her sister, so I had to
hunt down some Australians living in Limerick and interrogate them.”
I’ll be home for Christmas is published by Hachette
Books Ireland and is available at Amazon and all good
booksellers nationwide. Signed copies are available in O’Mahony’s O’Connell St.
FURTHER INFORMATION AND APPLICATION PROCEDURES AVAILABLE FROM: Admissions Office, Mary Immaculate College, South Circular Road, Limerick
T: + 353 61 204929 / + 353 61 204348 F: + 353 61 204903 E: admissions@mic.ul.ie
www.mic.ul.ie
Article by: Cornelia O’Riordan Limerick Magazine 274mm x 175mm
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l ite ratu re: Donal Rya n When I read Donal Ryan’s The Thing About
Ryan spent most of the past fifteen years working as a
Gough who has used the theme of economy in his
capture the essence of the book’s protagonist, Johnsey
a lot of false starts down through the years. That
In fact it is the work of Julian Gough that Ryan credits
December I was profoundly moved by his ability to
Cunliffe. An isolated, lonely man trapped in a rural
graveyard of ambition, Cunliffe’s story is one I defy any man not to identify with.
In some way I expected Ryan to be a larger than life character, a gregarious storyteller in the true Irish sense. This was not the case. Upon meeting Donal Ryan I was struck by the sense that the man is a
thinker. His quiet spoken, slightly shy demeanour hides his innate creative skill that has seen him top
bestseller lists, win Irish Book of the Year and be longlisted for the Man Booker Prize for his debut novel.
civil servant. From a writing perspective he describes
niggling lack of confidence in his own ability and a fear of others not accepting of liking his work are
some of the reasons he attributes to a relative late arrival on the literary scene.
“This is the dichotomy that tears at the soul of all
writers. Writing is such a personal thing”, he says. “You can’t allow yourself to be self indulgent. You
must keep part of your mind focussed on your reader. The art of writing is intensely personal. You create
your art in a solitary environment and then you put it out there into a world in which you have no control as
to how it is interpreted, understood or received. It is so easy for your confidence to just disappear.”
Donal Ryan doesn’t strike you as the stereotypical
Ryan admits he didn’t take writing seriously until
reflective of the struggle with confidence that defined
his wife Anne-Marie as the one who gave him the
storyteller. If anything his inherent shyness is perhaps his early writing period. Confidence is a word that
Ryan touches on a number of times throughout the interview. This issue of confidence or lack thereof
perhaps can be forgiven when you take in the fact that his first two novels were, between them, rejected 47 times before finally seeing the light of day.
Writing has been a passion for Donal Ryan since early
childhood. Growing up in the rural town of Newtown
in North Tipperary, Ryan’s home was one filled with the books that would inspire. An avid reader, Ryan’s inspiration as writer came from the diversity of styles his parents seemed to curate.
“For some reason my parents filled the bookshelves with the work of mid-twentieth century American writers,” he says. “The novels of Steinbeck, Bellow and
Hemingway captured me. I was particularly taken by
the work of Norman Mailer. At an early age I had a
sense that he was a cool dude, a slugger and someone I wanted to idolise.”
58
he was in his early thirties. He gives great credit to encouragement and the advice he needed when times were tough. It was around this time he started to write The Thing About December.
“It was my wife Anne-Marie who kept me going. She
liked that character of Johnsey Cunliffe so much that
it gave me the impetus to keep going. It is her book,”
work to hilarious and powerful effect.”
as one of the reasons his is who he is today. His short story The Orphan and the Mob won the biggest short
story prize in the world in 2007 and had a profound effect on Ryan’s output.
Gough went to my school in Tipperary,” Donal Ryan
remembers. “He was in the cult rock band Toaster
Heretic and I viewed him as a rock star both from a
musical and a literature point of view. The fact that he existed and could do such amazing things with words was a huge influence for me.”
The discovery of his own unique writer’s voice is something that Ryan struggled with for many years.
“The whole idea of the writer’s voice is a sort of
nebulus, an ill-defined thing and something I found very hard to pin down,” he says.
“I discovered the landscape, language and lexicon of East Limerick and North Tipperary were what I knew best. This released a flow to my writing, gave me
a voice. Colum McCann says of writing that you must
start with what you know and then write towards what you don’t know.”
he says.
Ryan notes how important it was for him to work
of the Celtic Tiger, the skeletons it left behind and
listening to the conversations of others. He sees a
Ryan’s work on some levels seems to use the death the mourning of ambition as the backdrop for his
work. However, Ryan denies that these themes are something that he is overly preoccupied by.
“The landscape of my native place is what I use predominantly in my writing”, he notes. “My writing
is set in contemporary Ireland so themes like these are no doubt going to have some role to play. There is no
way of avoiding it. It is going to become a theme of its own no matter what you do. You can approach such
themes in various ways. Look at the work of Julian
with the familiar. Most of his inspiration comes from uniqueness to the Irish people communicate.
“Our language often is focussed on all the things we
don’t say,” he says. “Every sentence is often loaded. The way we use the English language is perfect. I hate
the phrase Hiberno-English. It is just this academic confection of a concept. Irish people communicate almost universally in stories.”
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The Thing About December was originally scheduled
“For many years this was what prevented my output,”
Ryan believes Limerick’s bid for European Capital of
Lilliput sold the rights of his work to Random House
question myself. I always felt there must be a better
“For anyone who has an artistic mindset but has yet
for publication before The Spinning Heart. When they decided to inverse this schedule.
“In hindsight this was a good idea,” Ryan says. “There
had been a lot of journalistic commentary about the
he remembers. “I would start telling a story and then way of saying something. Trust in myself was so hard to find.”
Culture is a unique opportunity for the region.
to explore it fully I think the opportunity that the bid presents is endless.” he says.
lack of fiction dealing directly with the economic
Ryan has a deep love for Irish writing and believes
“So many talented creatives feel the urge to drop their
my work.”
of fulfilment.
need to play safe. The fact that a place like Limerick,
crash. The publishers saw a gap in the market with
Ryan admits a slight bias of affection towards The
Thing about December. It was a book was rejected on numerous occasions before finally getting the nod for publication.
solely reading Irish literature could lead to a lifetime “People say there is a new ‘movement’ in Irish
writing but I don’t agree,” he says. “This suggests that contemporary Irish writers are all working with the same theme which isn’t the case.”
talent in return for a ‘traditional job’. They feel they
a small city, a scrapper of a city, could win such a prestigious bid would give such a boost not just to the
city but the vast number of talented creatives the city is now generating.”
“The Spinning Heart was created out of a need to
Ryan has recently taken up the position of writer in
Ryan speaks of a deep respect for the likes of theatre
didn’t keep going I would lose the impetus. In some
of Limerick as part of the MA in Creative Writing
group who formed in the middle of the economic
keep momentum going,” he notes. “I felt that if I
ways that initial rejection got to me. I found it so
hard to believe in what I was doing and to see that
there was merit to what I was trying to achieve. The smallest negative thought can have a profound effect on your dreams.”
The Thing About December is based very loosely on real life stories Ryan has encountered down through
the years. He describes the character of Johnsey Cunliffe as a distillation of lots of beautiful souls, men whose voice you won’t hear that often.
“The thing that prevented me from writing for ten
years was the fact that I couldn’t find a story to tell,” Ryan tells me.
“There is something about the infinity of possibilities
that writing fiction offers that constricts your output. The limitlessness offered by the fictional genre can actually end up causing paralysis for the writer. You
residence in the Arts Department of the University
course which is chaired by Joseph O’Connor. The position has allowed him to encounter new young
writers who have challenged his own way of working. “The fact that I am based at UL has allowed me to have a productive structure to my day,” he says.
“I write in the mornings and then spend the afternoon
storm with Myles Breen’s Language Unbecoming a Lady,” he notes.
“There is a performance in the everyday in
in my own process. My productivity as a writer has trebled since I took up the residency. I see it as a godsend.”
Despite having his roots in Tipperary, Donal Ryan has very strong links to Limerick. Creative Limerick
writers such as Gerry Stembridge, Kevin Barry, Paul Lynch and Roisin Meaney are writers who have greatly influenced his work.
“Frank McCourt is one of the reasons I’m a writer.
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afloat. Only recently we saw them take New York by
process with students it allows me to discover flaws
disconnect from my work. As I discuss the writing
ways you can construct a sentence.”
to a fear of actually putting ink on the page.
“They have sailed into stormy waters and stayed
Ryan describes what he sees as an artistic sensibility
“They are all writers with fascinating stories to tell
It is this abundance of possibilities that ironically led
downturn.
working with students. This process allows me to
can find infinite stories and find infinite ways of telling those stories. There is no end to the number of
producers such as Bottom Dog Theatre Company, a
and incredible ways of doing it,” he says.
I often forget to credit his influence because the effect he had on the way I approach writing was so
profound it has almost become part of my make-up, and not something I consciously think about.”
that seems to rise naturally from Limerick people. Limerick. The smallest little thing can become a
fascinating drama. There is an addictive quality to the way Limerick people tell their stories, a sense of
fearlessness that goes back almost a thousand years. Limerick stood against so many invaders and was never conquered. It says it all really.”
Article by: Nigel Dugdale
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discove ri n g the pas t Was a Limerick man the inspiration for Jane Austen’s romantic novels?
It is known their relationship was a close one, as
Despite some allegations in Parliament that he was
likely to be found on the shelves of her clergyman
Justice until 1866 when, at the age of 90. Tom Lefroy
he lent her Tom Jones, an amazingly racy novel not father’s library. Others thought them a couple, one
acquaintance going so far as sketching a picture of
Tom for Jane to keep. But four weeks after they met,
too old to do the job, Tom did not resign as Chief
lived a full life and died May 4, 1869 at the ripe old age of 93.
Jane and her ‘Irish friend’ were forced to part: he
After Jane Austen’s death Tom would travel from
sister Cassandra:
advancing his law career.
when publishers Cadell & Davies went out of business
“At length the day is come on which I am to flirt my last
The following year he was engaged to. Mary Paul
over—My tears flow as I write this, at this melancholy
more eligible match for Tom, as she was born into
In January 1796, Jane Austen wrote a letter to her
was called to his uncle’s house to study at the Bar
with Tom Lefroy, & when you receive this, it will be
from Wexford, sister of a college friend who was a
idea.”
a wealthy family and due a large dowry. They were
These lines written to her sister may have been edged
families had taken refuge during the 1798 Rebellion,
married in in 1799 in Wales where many Wexford
with satire, but this Tom man did leave a mark on
and went to live in Dublin and had seven children.
But who was this Tom Lefroy? He was Thomas
Tom was elected to the House of Commons in 1830,
army officer, only a month older than Jane herself. He
of Ireland on 29 January 1835. He continued as MP
in the heart of the newly developed Newtownpery in
judge (with the title of a Baron of the Exchequer) in
Jane as did Jane on Tom.
Ireland to England to pay his respects. Years later Tom would buy at an auction a letter of refusal to Mr. Austen, who had sent one of Jane’s manuscripts to
them. Jane’s sister Cassandra destroyed the majority of Jane’s letters so we will never know how she really felt about Tom.
The year after his death a nephew Tom’s would write: “My late venerable uncle... said in so many words that he
was in love with her, although he qualified his confession
Langlois Lefroy, the 20 year old eldest son of a wealthy
as a Tory. He became a member of the Privy Council
was born at 108 George’s Street (O’Connell Street)
for Dublin University, until he was appointed an Irish
Jane, by not marrying Tom, was spared a life ground
Limerick city.
1841. He was promoted to Chief Justice of the Court
Instead she had time to write three novels before
His uncle described him as having “everything in his
of Queen’s Bench in Ireland in 1852.
by saying it was a boyish love.”
by almost continuous pregnancy in a foreign country. she was 24, so without this loss, we may never have
seen Jane Austen’s novels in print. Jane remained
temper and character that can conciliate affections. A
In his later years Tom carried a Bible, and argued
correcting him as ever I saw in one of his age”. While
the morals of the lower classes, and he was against
Article by: Sharon Slater
pleasant young man.”
Catholic emancipation, and founded a society to send
Image: From a sketch of Jane Austin by her sister
The pair met as Tom was spending Christmas 1795
of his decisions were harsh: during the Famine he
too far from Steventon (where the Austen family
for encouraging tenants not to pay rent. Tom’s hand
the Austen ladies. It was while attending a ball in the
ancestors had fled oppression in France, is an irony
good heart, a good mind, good sense and as little to
that only a proper system of education could improve
Jane said: “He is a very gentlemanlike, good-looking,
extending the vote to the middle classes. He opposed
Protestant missionaries into Catholic areas. Many
with his uncle George Lefroy, rector of Ashe, not
transported leaders of the Young Ireland movement
lived). Tom’s aunt Mrs. Lefroy was a great friend of
in the oppression of Catholics, when his Huguenot
neighbourhood that Tom and Jane danced the night
Jane would not have missed.
away over the holiday season.
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unmarried and passed away in 1817.
Casandra. Thomas Lefroy by William Henry Mote.
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Sta r tu p Weekend 54 hours to pitch, build and launch a start-up. Sounds
hours! The first day is pitch day, so participants have
entrepreneurs who take part in Startup Weekend. Shane
narrowed down to the best and most workable, then
impossible? Tell that to the designers, developers and
McCarthy, founder of BlueChief Social and organiser
of Startup Weekend Limerick, explains the excitement, energy and real opportunities the weekend provides.
You’re the recent founder of a startup yourself – what led to you organising Startup Weekend Limerick?
I set up BlueChief, a social media agency just over two years ago, and it’s been going pretty well, since
then we’ve built up a team of 8, we’re one of the
biggest agencies in Ireland providing strategical, account management and training for many third levels organisations.
it’s time to recruit a team and get people to support the business. The final pitches take place on Sunday in
front of our judging panel. It’s not for the passive or faint hearted! Of the 60 people who might be there
Friday, five or so may have dropped out. It is a huge task for anyone but if you do it, and your business is
the one chosen as well, that’s a massive achievement. There were four startups that were founded and are growing from the last start up weekend. They are further along than we were at that stage, I really wish
we’d been able to do a start up weekend when we launched!
So yes, you might wonder how, with my own startup
Why should anyone interested in entrepreneurship
Limerick! I was invited as a guest to Startup Dublin,
There is such a buzz over the weekend, the atmosphere
in its early stages, how I came to head up weekend
at that time none of the others existed in Ireland. Gene Murphy, the founder, took me aside before I even
entered the doors of that event, and propositioned the
idea of setting up in other cities, Galway, Cork, etc and asked if I would be interested in Limerick. Of course I said yes, even though I hadn’t seen the event yet I knew this was something I wanted to be a part
of – it’s a global movement, starting in San Francisco, and it’s changing the way we think about starting a business.
What makes Startup Weekend different to other business events?
The weekend is all about entrepreneurial education. It’s not simply a networking event, a series of lectures or presentations, people who come are learning exactly what it takes to launch a start up, and what’s more they are doing it by actually launching a startup in 54
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to pitch their idea, these are vetted by everyone and
attend?
is truly electric. Everyone involved is so excited about the ideas and what’s being learned and discovered. We
have mentors with a wealth of experience, investors who may if they like what they see seek to provide real
monetary backing to a business idea discovered there, the possibilities are endless for anyone who thinks they
might be interested in the world of entrepreneurship, and it’s for anyone of any background, technical or non-technical.
Just a few examples of the names who’ll be there to guide and judge the process, we have Ed Fidgeon
Kavanagh, he’s a presentations consultant and is one
of the top ten in Ireland, presenting is such a vital aspect of starting a business, his insight will be so
valuable. We also have Gillian Barry, Enterprise
Development and Business Liaison Manager of LIT, as well as a whole host of other experts on hand to give invaluable insight and guidance
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
What makes Limerick such a great place for start-
& Johnson. It’s great to have been a part of that, and
We’re the second biggest in the country, well on our
to create this movement, I’ve had to sacrifice a fair
ups?
way to being the top, but it’s not that there were any particular conditions here that made it so, especially
five or so years ago. What’s made it happen, in a
nutshell, is hard work. Hard work to actively build a start-up culture, and work to create a brand around Limerick startups. And multinationals here deserve
some credit too, they didn’t at first but they are now getting involved and supporting small businesses with
sponsorship and initiatives, e.g. Dell, Kemp, Johnson
I’m not the only one who can admit that in order
Startup Weekend Limerick takes place on November 20th – 22nd.
bit, including the growth of my own business. But
The event is part of Global Entrepreneurship Week,
BlueChief, and be one of the only ones doing it here,
more information visit
what would I prefer, to be a bit further along with or be part of a group creating the conditions to see a startup community flourish? That’s better for all of us in the long run, and now Limerick has gained so much confidence and positivity it won’t be long before
we’re the startup capital of Ireland, it’s like a perfect startup storm occurring here!
and it’s the third ever Startup Weekend Limerick. For
www.up.co/communities/ireland/limerick/startupweekend
Article by: Kayleigh Ziolo
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ne t wor k l i m eri ck
The Network Limerick committee is made up of local businesswomen, who give their time to make
On reputation (and causing offence)…
all who attend. Network Limerick President Gillian
we’ve made plenty of rubbish ones too. Our approach
Network Limerick events valuable and exciting for Horan makes sure to tell us just how hard they all work on a completely voluntary basis. A passion for
business, the chance to celebrate success and support
to mischief is making people offended on behalf of others.”
each other on their way is what drives them.
On doing some good in the world…
Members have access to many benefits, including
promote ourselves but to try to make a difference too.
mentoring services and training opportunities in
business and management and personal development, as well as meetings and PR opportunities to promote their business throughout the year.
Perhaps the most impressive aspect of the network
is the speakers they invite to their events. Again, this is down to the hard work and excellent contacts
the committee provide. Special events are put on throughout the year, many of them open to nonmembers (yes men, that includes you too). They are
“We used the expectation people have of us not just to
Our rainforest stunt (for the Brazil 2014 World Cup Paddy Power pretended it had cut a good luck message
to England into the Amazon Rainforest) showed just how many people care about the rainforest, and we
raised awareness of how rapidly it is being destroyed.” On similarities between Paddy Power and Ryanair…. “No I don’t think we’re similar. We’re not as abrasive
as Ryanair were, and you’d never see us fighting laws and governments like O’Leary. We’re just having the craic.”
well worth attending for the knowledge, insight,
On the future of betting shops...
in a fun and informal atmosphere, held at some of
myself. While UK custom is all online, in Ireland the
and inspiration you stand to gain in great company
Limerick’s finest hotels such as The Savoy and One Pery Square.
Making Mischief with Paddy Power
“We’re not closing ours. I still go in every Saturday
online business is half the size of the retail. We’re
creating the betting shops of the future, using new technology, but the staff will always be the most important part of the experience.”
A recent example of the fascinating speakers you can
expect is controversial bookmaker chief Paddy Power.
Upcoming event: Virgin Media
He brought his own brand of humour to a revealing
talk on Optimising Your Brand in October, telling the
The next Network Limerick members event is
stories behind some of the company’s most famous
focusing on the Magic of Virgin and their top females! Gillian says: “it will be a fantastic panel of
stunts. Here are some of his most memorable quotes from the evening… On social media…
“You can buy followers, but you can’t buy engagement and positive reactions. It’s all about maintaining
the conversation with our customers and creating
conversations with others. We are the first company to be talked about online outside of betting culture.”
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“We are known for making good funny ads, but
top female executives coming to chat to us - it is a panel set up so it will be highly interactive and there will be a chance for an attendee to win an iPad on the
night. Virgin Media will be giving goodie bags too and they are branding the room on the night so it will be very much a branded fun event.”
For information on Network Limerick and how to join visit www.networklimerick.com
Working to promote women in business, Network Limerick, part of Network Ireland, is a welcoming and vibrant community of ambitious, talented entrepreneurs and businesswomen. Members are made up of women from all industry backgrounds, those who are just starting out, are established, and are looking to make new contacts or build a support network with likeminded women they often end up calling friends.
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
l o ca l c aus e Strictly Care To Dance At The Movies A fundraising night and a fitting way to remember to
a much missed individual, Strictly Care To Dance… is taking place in the South Court Hotel on Saturday November 28th. With the dancing judged by Limerick
legends including Celia Holman Lee, it is sure to be
a night full of sparkle, with all proceeds going three
extremely worthy charities. We speak to the organisers about the event to find out how you can support them.
Why did you decide to organise Strictly Care to
Why did you choose the theme ‘At The Movies’ for
The event came about after one of the committee
At the movies came about when we spoke in great
Dance At The Movies?
members Ger O’Connell lost his brother Matt to
Cancer in November last year. Ger saw the outstanding
care, dedication & support the staff in Milford
Hospice gave to his brother Matt and to all the family. They were a great support network for the family and
helped them get through this extremely difficult time. Ger wanted to give something back so he roped a few
the event?
length about exactly what our night was going to be
like. There are a lot of ‘Strictlys’ on at the moment so
we wanted to be different. Everyone loves the movies
and there have been some amazing hit songs from
them. A theme of some sort is always good. We do
like attention to detail so the movies just hit out at us.
of us in and after a short time brainstorming, we soon
Who are the celebrities that will be judging the
Come Dancing. Matt loved dancing and taught so
We have been very fortunate to have four amazing
realised there was only one thing we could do: Strictly many people how to dance that this is the most fitting tribute we can possibly give.
What are the chosen charities that the proceeds
from the event will be helping? -Why did you
competition on the night?
judges. Celia Holman Lee, Leanne Moore, TJ Ryan & Richard Lynch. Four great personalities all under one roof commenting on our dancing couples, it’s going to be great.
choose these charities in particular?
What can attendees expect from the night’s
first charity. We also choose Cliona’s Foundation, as
Attendees will definitely have one of the best nights
Well, Milford Hospice due to Matt’s passing is our Ger knows the founders Brendan & Terry Ring. They
set up this charity after they lost their own daughter
a few years back. Cliona’s foundation give financial support to families with critically ill children. It’s difficult enough to deal with a sick child let alone
have the worry of financial pressure on you. And the
festivities?
out, with fantastic dancing and a few surprises along the way. Everyone loves surprises so we felt we’d throw a few in for the audience and the dancers! It’s going
to be fun, upbeat and definitely with some comedy thrown in for good measure.
third is the Baby Michael’s Trust Fund. Michael is
Where are tickets available and where can we find
neurotransmitter disorder. Michael is the only child
Tickets are completely sold out. The sales sky rocketed
a beautiful 3 year old boy who was diagnosed with in Ireland with this disorder and is one of 16 in
Ormond Street Hospital in London. Michael needs
24 hour care, he has massive medial bills each month to help with his condition. Michaels father is a native
of Pallasgreen where the committee are from so we know the family well and wanted to help them out.
more information?
more than we ever imagined. It is fantastic. People
even asked us to put on a second night the demand was and still is crazy. But we’re not. One night only
I’m afraid. People can still support our dancers though
by voting. Each vote costs €1 and all money raised goes to the three very worthy charities.
You can also follow us on Facebook: Strictly Care To
Dance At The Movies. The full list of dancers and pictures are all there.
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Any parting words?
helping to get our dancers ready for their big night.
A massive thank you also goes also to our dancers.
everyone that has got involved in our fundraiser.
forgetting Catherine Hayes ( Joes wife) and Patsy’s
We are so grateful to you and your families. To
I would just like to take this opportunity in thanking
To our main sponsor St Ailbhes credit union. To
all sponsors who have sponsored a dancing couple, placed ads in programme etc. To Cube printing for all
our promotional material, our dance coaches, Richie Harty, Mary O Neill and Patsy McNamara; they have been truly incredible from the very beginning
A lot of work and commitment goes into it. And not
brother Kevin McNamara whom have come to many
of the rehearsals to lend a helping hand. We thank you all so much.
Only for you we wouldn’t be able to do this fundraiser.
sacrifice several nights a week in rehearsal is a big ask. Ye are an amazing bunch of people thank you all!
Article by: Cornelia O’Riordan
Photography by: Keith Wiseman
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THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
Thoughts on… Limerick humour What springs to mind when asked to name a Limerick
And it’s no coincidence that there have been quite a
Limerick people?
the years – from Tom and Paschal to D’Unbelievables
trait? What characteristic do we think best represents Tenacity, pride, passion perhaps... or what about our distinctive wit?
The uniqueness of our humour should definitely be up there, there’s little doubt in my mind. The natural
quick wit of Limerick folk can be heard on the city
streets if you take time to listen. Limerick people of walks of life, both young and old, can roll a comeback
off their tongue without missing a beat. If they have
a strong Limerick city accent, all the better, it just adds to the effect. You can almost feel the zing! at the punchline.
Being funny is an asset from an early age. Getting a
‘slagging’ at school - or ‘banter’ as it’s called in 2015 - was a rite of passage growing up in Limerick. And
how you took the slagging was equally important. If you fought back with an even wittier comment you
to Karl Spain and the Rubberbandits. Amongst all
these, it’s the Rubberbandits who have most closely reflected the humour of the ‘street’. The accent and indeed the plastic bags haven’t been a barrier to success – in fact, they’ve set the lads apart - they have been
embraced throughout Ireland and internationally
without watering it down; expertly crafted irony needs no translation.
Plus, they are undeniably Limerick And Proud. As well as making us howl with laughter, the lads
have used their voices to speak about topics they
passionately believe in – from drug laws to marriage equality. Rugby however, isn’t one of them, as revealed
in one of their recent tweets: “I wish I understood Rugby. To me it just looks like rich men arguing about a leather balloon in a field.”
were an even bigger legend. In every Limerick school
We can be proud of a lot of things in Limerick, and
most popular in the playground because everyone
be ourselves more credit for who we are as a city and
playground, a quick witted young girl or boy was the knew that by hanging around him/her you’d be guaranteed a laugh about the day’s events in school.
Having a quick wit is also an excellent form of defence. If we do encounter someone making a derogatory
in the last couple of years in particular we seem to county . Now is our time to shine. We should embrace
all that makes us so unique, and that includes our wit and banter.
comment, what better way to stop them in their
Article by: Clodagh O’Leary
Limerick people can be so quick-witted – we have
Have a Thought On Limerick that you’d like to share
negativity more than most.
in touch tlm@fusionmedia.ie
tracks by making a witty remark? Perhaps that’s why
been used to having to defend ourselves in the face of
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few Limerick comedians who made it big throughout
with readers? Whatever it is, we want to hear it! Get
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pa r enti ng 6 Advantages of Breastfeeding
friends rushing en masse to your house. Tea and coffee
making for an endless stream of visitors may lead to a shortage of Avonmore Slimline milk. Thankfully
I have put an end to this problem. I have my own Like all mums, Jane wanted to give her child the best start
personal supply, ready fresh from source to add to
in life. And if it saved on the washing up, even better...
the beverages of unsuspecting guests. I also add it to
Yes, yes, breast is best. However, some of the things
ingredients.
involved in the decision to breastfeed my child were, I confess, entirely unrelated to the lifelong health
benefits and alleged increased IQ. In fact, some were
baked goods and any type of recipe that requires fresh
Reason #3 Producing your own supply of fresh organic, locally
slightly less virtuous and more egocentric in nature…
sourced Irish made milk requires a lot of energy
Reason #1
that the milk making machine is kept well fuelled at
expenditure. It is of paramount importance to ensure
We often hear how breastfeeding is hard going, but
all times. This involves consuming an extra 500-700
decided to nurse my little nursling and continue to do
a matter of taste. Myself, I find that a plentiful supply
I simply could not be doing with sterilising bottles,
tea work best in order to guarantee maximum milk
I think it makes life much easier. The first reason I
calories per day, hurrah. How one wishes to do this is
so 16 months later is because I am sinfully slothful.
of Haagen Dazs ice cream, apple tarts and sugary
sterilising formula and sterilising the steriliser all
making capacity.
day long. I have little interest in extra housework or any housework for that matter, therefore in order
Reason #4
to prevent the child from contracting some type of
The next reason I chose to breastfeed is because I
boob route.
manage to find. Given that the average tin of formula
Reason #2
save around twenty two euros a week which amounts
bacterial infection it seemed easier to go down the
Birthing another human often results in family and
love shopping and I love to spend any spare change I costs around eleven euros, I have possibly managed to
this ‘saving’ affords me the opportunity to give in to my shopping addiction more often...
Reason #5 You are probably already familiar with the cosmetic
uses of this magical white liquid. Previously I would
have spent a fortune on cleanser, toner and eye makeup remover. Luckily I now have my own personal range
of milky facial products. This milk soothes, gently
cleanses and removes all traces of makeup. It can also reduce acne, wrinkles and dry skin. Never before has there been such a multifunctional product.
Reason #6 Fancy a career change? Uninterested in spending
time, money and effort on retraining? Why not consider becoming a wet nurse? No start-up fees or
training required! All you need is a plentiful supply of nutritious boob juice. Now that I am working as a stay at home mother this career option is available to me.
Hopefully I have convinced some new mothers out
there to give nursing a shot - it’s good for the baby, and good for you.
Article by Jane Butler O’ Halloran
to well over a thousand euros in one year. Subsequently
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th e li me rick magazine E v e nt gu i d e THE GREAT PIANISTS by Stuart O’Sullivan
Monday 16th November @ 7pm - 9pm
University Concert Hall, University of Limerick, Castletroy, Limerick
Lunchtime Performance Series: Traditional Dance Performance Tuesday 17th November @ 1.15pm
Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, University of Limerick, Limerick
Network Ireland Limerick November Event - Virgin Media
Lumiere
Wednesday 18th November @ 6pm
Lime Tree Theatre, Mary Immaculate College,
The Savoy Hotel, Henry Street, Limerick
Courtbrack Avenue, Limerick
Dusk Ahead
(In)visible Lines
Wednesday 18th November @ 8pm
Friday 20th - Saturday 21st November
Lime Tree Theatre, Mary Immaculate College, Courtbrack Avenue, Limerick
SEE for Cinema – 45 Years
Thursday 19th November @ 8pm
University of Limerick Castletroy Limerick
An Evening with Mae Leonard Friday 20th November @ 8pm
Wednesday 18th November @ 8pm
Lime Tree Theatre, Mary Immaculate College,
69 O’Connell Street, Limerick
Courtbrack Avenue, Limerick
Tuesday 17th November @ 1.15pm
The Grahams
Marc O’Reilly
Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, University
Saturday 20th November @ 8pm
of Limerick, Limerick
Wednesday 18th November @ 8pm
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Castleconnell Autumn Concert Series: A Romantic Voice
Light Moves: Festival of Screendance 2015
Metallitia
Tuesday 17th November @ 8pm
Thursday 19th - Sunday 22nd November
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Lunchtime Performance Series: Traditional Music & Dance
All Saint’s Church, Castleconnell, Co. Limerick
Dance Limerick, 1-2 John’s Square, Limerick
A Leaving Certificate Guide to Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major K. 488
Lunchtime Performance Series: Contemporary Dance Performance
Wednesday 18th November @ 12pm
Thursday 19th November @ 1.15pm
St Mary’s Cathedral, Bridge Street Limerick City
Lunchtime Performance Series: Limerick Voices - The Tower Sessions Wednesday 18th November @ 1.15pm
Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, University of Limerick, Limerick
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Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, University of Limerick, Limerick
Keith Barry - Out Of Control Thursday 19th November @ 8pm
University Concert Hall, University of Limerick, Castletroy, Limerick
Friday 20th November @ 9pm
Limerick Hackathon Saturday 21st November @ 10am
Fab Lab Limerick, 7 Rutland Street, Limerick
Light Moves Little Kids Club Saturday 21st November @ 11am
The Hunt Museum, Custom House, Rutland Street, Limerick City
Paddy Saturday 21st November : 8pm
Lime Tree Theatre, Mary Immaculate College, Courtbrack Avenue, Limerick
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Saved BY The 90’s
The Addams Family
Standing Tall (La Tete Haute)
Saturday 21st November @ 11.30pm
Wednesday 25th - Saturday 28th November @ 8pm
Friday 27th November @ 8pm
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Stone Setting (Jewellery Workshop)
Lime Tree Theatre, Mary Immaculate College, Courtbrack Avenue, Limerick
The Darkest Midnight
Sunday 22nd November @ 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 25th November @ 8pm
Limerick
Castletroy, Limerick
Wyvern Lingo
Two Brothers Vladimir & Anton Jablokov
Limerick Craft Hub, No. 9, Lower Cecil Street,
Sunday 22nd November @ 8pm
University Concert Hall, University of Limerick,
69 O’Connell Street, Limerick
Over The Top Wrestling Friday 27th November @ 8.15pm
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Santa at Bunratty Saturday 28th November - Wednesday 23rd december
Bunratty County Clare
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Wednesday 25th November @ 8pm
Social Media & Digital Marketing
Castletroy, Limerick
Saturday 28th November @ 2pm - 3pm
Limerick Chamber, 96 O’Connell Street, Limerick
Printing Fabric and Stitching Workshop for Adults
Limerick
Lunchtime Performance Series: Traditional Music & Dance
Thursday 26th November @ 6pm - 8pm
Munster Rugby v Connacht Rugby
Tuesday 24th November @ 10am - 4pm
University Concert Hall, University of Limerick,
Kids Fabric Painting Workshop Limerick Craft Hub, No. 9, Lower Cecil Street,
Limerick Craft Hub, No. 9, Lower Cecil Street,
Saturday 28th November @ 5.15pm
Tuesday 24th November @ 1.15pm
Limerick
Thomond Park Stadium, Limerick
of Limerick, Limerick
Peter Hook and The Light
In the Shadow of Women (L’Ombre des femmes)
Limerick’s Built Heritage Hidden dwellers within our built heritage
Dolans Pub & Warehouse, Dock Road, Limerick
Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, University
Tuesday 24th November @ 8pm
Fitzgerald’s Woodlands House Hotel, Knockanes, Adare, Co. Limerick
Lunchtime Performance Series: One Choir, One Community, No Divides, ALL Abilities Wednesday 25th November @ 1.15pm
Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, University of Limerick, Limerick
Thursday 26th November @ 8pm
Memories (Les Souvenirs) Thursday 26th November @ 8pm 69 O’Connell Street, Limerick
Lough Gur Santa Experience Weekends from 27nd November - 22nd December
Saturday 28th November @ 8pm 60 O’Connell Street, Limerick
Miracle on 34th Street Sunday 29th November @ 3pm
University Concert Hall, University of Limerick
‘On the Nail’ Literary Gathering
Lough Gur County Limerick
Tuesday 1st December @ 8pm
Nathan Carter
Limerick
The Loft Venue, The Locke Bar, 3 George’s Quay,
Friday 27th November @ 8pm
University Concert Hall, University of Limerick, Castletroy, Limerick
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distribution list Limerick City Centre
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Closing Time 1 0 m inutes wit h … joe n a s h Describe your perfect day off in Limerick.
Can you sum up your life in three words?
stroll around the city river boardwalk or Curragh
What would you do as King for a day?
I think it would include a late breakfast in town, a
Chase, a match at Thomond Park or the Market’s Field and a trip to a show.
As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up? The Limerick Today presenter and chief executive of
Live95fm is a voice we all know very well, but we’re
more used to hearing him ask the questions. So we decided to turn the tables and find out a little more about the radio stalwart…
When I realised I didn’t have the skill to be a sports star, it was always about the media, especially radio. Do you have any hidden talents?
I have colour peripheral vision, which the medics tell me is actually physically impossible! Any bad habits?
I like chips a bit too much. Best advice you’ve ever received?
Wait 24 hours before making an important decision.
Your worst fear?
I hate flying with a deep passion but still force myself to do it.
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Family, friends, Limerick.
Make Limerick the capital of the universe. Do you have a role model/person you most admire?
I’ve met very few in which I didn’t find something to admire.
Countdown to Christmas, or Bah Humbug? Somewhere between the two...
THE LIMERICK MAGAZINE
79
Thank You Limerick We are delighted to have been short-listed in the competition to become European Capital of Culture 2020. We want to thank everyone that has participated in Limerick2020 events and workshops, shared their stories, given their time, championed us, connected with us and willed us across the line. Your support and encouragement have got us this far. Thank you! Our next submission is in July 2016. We look forward to your input and support in this final stage of the competition.
ThE LimEriCk 2020 bid TEam
WWW.LIMERICK2020.IE
#we are culture