Film

The End of The World

2023

A visual meditation, The End of the World unfolds in slow, atmospheric sequences. Its imagery blends of ancient landscapes with symbolism of decay, collapse and transition. The film lingers on textures, shifting light, and subtle gestures of movement—inviting reflection on endings, change, and what persists through transformation.

The Hut

2022

In The Hut, the construction of a living willow structure is documented. Situated in the community garden, Mud Island, behind North Strand, the piece draws on the shape of a mollusc shell and echoes early shelter forms such as a beehive hut or a crannóg. The installation uses willow harvested from Newgrange, woven into a human-sized nest-like enclosure and wrapped in yarn until the living branches arrive in spring.

The film interweaves the physical making of the hut with footage of the community gardeners and archival animation of nature and animals. As the urban landscape begins to encroach on natural habitats, the imagery becomes more urgent, suggesting a call to action for environmental protection. In doing so, the work connects the rooted-ness of craft and nature with the wider pressures of urban life and change.

The film presents the hut not simply as sculpture but as a site of interaction—between materials, people, history and ecology. It invites the viewer to reflect on how human-made and natural worlds merge, and on how a simple structure can hold deeper implications of shelter, growth and continuity in a changing city.

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