Stories
- Article
A wee spot of bother
Euphemisms can both appear to diminish experiences while at the same time making them easier to talk about. Carrie Hynds, who experienced the latter part of Northern Ireland’s “Troubles”, explores the relationship between language and trauma.
- Article
“Life and the universe change our plans”
Artist Lil Sullivan returns to the printmaking workshop for the first time after her stroke, and uses broken and discarded everyday objects to create art.
- Article
Maria McKinney on ‘Sire’
All my grandparents were farmers; I grew up in the countryside surrounded by farms and helped neighbours herd sheep and cattle into the field. My body of work called ‘Sire’ looks at the genomics of modern cattle breeding.
- Article
Disturbed minds and disruptive bodies
Prison officers tried to regulate women’s minds and bodies and maintain a new disciplinary routine in the second half of the 1800s.
Catalogue
- Archives and manuscripts
"Ireland"
Date: 1994-2004Reference: ART/AFH/A/9/12Part of: Arts for Health: archive- Archives and manuscripts
"Ireland: General Information"
Date: 1985-1999Reference: ART/AFH/A/9/17Part of: Arts for Health: archive- Archives and manuscripts
Ireland
Date: 1956-1974Reference: SA/MSS/D/34Part of: Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland- Archives and manuscripts
Ireland (13/32)
Date: Apr 1959Reference: PP/RRM/C.34Part of: Macintosh, Sir Robert (1897-1989)- Archives and manuscripts
"Ireland 1990"
Date: 1990Reference: PP/SHF/A/C/5/1/1Part of: Foulkes, Siegmund Heinrich (1898-1976) and Elizabeth Therese Fanny (née Marx) (1918-2004)