This week, in our “Artists Corner’, ICC Digital brings you another wonderful photograph from the gallery of the great Irish photographer Tony O’Shea.
Last week we brought you O’Shea’s evocative image of Irish women protesting about the Divorce Referendum, outside the GPO in Dublin in 1986. Today we bring you another powerful image which once again captures the old ways of Catholic Ireland, from days gone bye.
This Easter tradition of young boys ‘carrying the cross’ which marked Good Fridays, has become lost in the fast changing contemporary Dublin of today.
The photographs is called
Good Friday, North Inner City, Dublin 1984.
These photograph was part of the major exhibition of Tony’s work, which was commissioned and curated by ‘The Gallery Of photography, Ireland’. The exhibition was accompanied by a new publication, Tony O Shea’s “The Light Of Day” (by RRB Books), which has an essay by Irish writer Colm Tóibín.
About Tony O’Shea
Tony O’Shea, now aged 73, is a legendary Irish documentary photographer. His book Dubliners occupies a pivotal role in the history of Irish photography and defines the territory that O’Shea made so inimitably his own – the everyday life of ordinary people, their joys and sorrows, their struggles and triumphs, the rituals that they use to make sense of their lives.
Tony O’Shea studied English and Philosophy at University College Dublin and towards the end of the 1970s he took up photography. By 1981 he’d begun working full-time as a photographer with ‘In Dublin’ Magazine’ and went on to work for Sunday Business Post for many years. His first book Dubliners, also included a text by Colm Tóibín was published by Macdonald Illustrated.
Tony O’Shea’s photographs and his exhibition “The Light Of Day” are available to buy from ‘The Gallery Of Photography – Ireland’ https://www.photobooks.site/
His book “The Light of Day” is available to buy from RRB Books
His book ‘Dubliners’ is available to buy on Amazon.
See many more photographs by Tony O’Shea in our ‘Artist’s Corner’ on ICC Digital