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Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
Vision: Building a Better Ballaghaderreen where arts, regeneration & creativity are central to a vibrant, diverse & proud community
Project Email:creativeplacesballagh@gmail.com
Coordinator Email: Joanna Hopkins JoannaHopkins@ridc.ie>
Instagram: @creative_placesballaghaderreen
Facebook: Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
What is the Creative Places Programme?
Creative Places / Cumas Ceantar is a national Arts Council programme, in partnership with Local Authorities, providing long-term funding for communities to create and run vibrant, accessible and inclusive arts programmes in their own local areas, particularly in places that have not previously benefited from sustained arts investment.
Established in 2020, the programme supports long-term collaboration between artists, local authorities and communities to build inclusive and vibrant local arts engagement. To date, €5 million has been invested in 19 communities across Ireland, reaching more than 125,000 people.
Arts Council Announce award for Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
November 2025
The Arts Council has awarded Creative Places SEED funding to Ballaghaderreen, as part of a €1,097,000 national investment in communities across Ireland for 2025. Ballaghaderreen is one of three Creative Places to move from research and development to a three-year programme phase in 2025, each receiving €310,000.
Patrick O’Donovan TD, Minister for Culture, Communications and Sport commented: “Creative Places brings the arts into the heart of communities where sustained opportunities have been limited. The impact is clear—building confidence, wellbeing and local pride, and helping people see their places in new and inspiring ways through creativity.”
Maura McGrath, Chair, The Arts Council said: “Creative Places expands access to the arts and recognises the creativity already present in communities and the value of supporting it to grow. The Arts Council is proud to continue investing in local collaboration, imagination and inclusion through Creative Places.”
Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
The vision of Creative Places Ballaghaderreen is that the arts and creativity are central to a vibrant, diverse and proud community. The programme promotes wider opportunities to engage in the arts and culture, while also responding to the evolving community profile in Ballaghaderreen and the wider Roscommon area.
Ballaghaderreen has developed a strong foundation of creativity and participation in recent years, from community music and craft initiatives to intercultural arts projects that reflect the town’s diversity. The Creative Places programme will build on this energy—supporting artists and local groups to collaborate, share skills and create work that speaks to the town’s unique character and sense of welcome.
Project Announcement
Dedicated Project Coordinator Appointed to Lead Next Phase of Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
Three-year Arts Council and Local Authority investment to grow community-led arts in a changing rural town

Image Above: New Creative Places Ballaghaderreen Coordinator Joanna Hopkins.
Written by Niamh McGarry, Ballaghaderreen Town Team.
Ballaghaderreen, Co. Roscommon – 24th November 2025
Creative Places Ballaghaderreen is delighted to announce the appointment of Joanna Hopkins as Project Coordinator, marking an important new chapter for the town as it moves from a one-year research phase into a three-year, multi-annual programme funded by The Arts Council of Ireland and Roscommon County Council.
Creative Places is a flagship Arts Council/Local Authority initiative that brings sustained arts investment to towns, villages and rural places that have had fewer opportunities to take part in the arts, with programmes rooted in socially engaged practice and community-development principles.
Ballaghaderreen is one of a small number of communities nationwide to progress from a research and development phase to a full three-year Creative Places programme from 2025–2028. This ambitious project is supported by Arts Council of Ireland investment of €310,000 together with additional match funding from Roscommon County Council, Roscommon Leader Partnership and Creative Ireland, bringing the total investment to over €500,000.
A rural town in transition
Located in west Roscommon, Ballaghaderreen is a rural market town experiencing rapid social and demographic change, including significant population growth, new communities arriving through international protection, and ongoing challenges linked to employment, services and local amenities. The Creative Places Ballaghaderreen vision is that “the arts, regeneration and creativity are central to a vibrant, diverse and proud community”, and that creative activity can play a key role in rural development, cohesion and local pride.
Groundwork laid by 2023–2024 research programme
The three-year programme builds on the one-year Creative Places Ballaghaderreen Research and Development phase (2023–2024) funded by the Arts Council of Ireland and Roscommon County Council. This phase saw Artist-Researchers Anna King, Julie Sharkey and Nollaig Molloy, working closely with Mary Smyth of Roscommon Arts Office and a local steering group.
Over the course of the research year, the programme worked closely with local residents, community organisations and schools to:
● Map existing cultural activity and local creative strengths
● Explore Ballaghaderreen’s rich heritage and sense of place through projects such as Placeways, This archive is a Powerhouse, The Cut on the River Lung, Rambling House, Ballaghaderreen’s Womens Circle, 3-of-Arts Artist Collaboration commission, the Heritage Exhibition, Cherry Blossom Tales, and many more.
● Create opportunities for people of all ages and backgrounds to come together through workshops, walks, storytelling, visual art, performance and public events
● Pilot long-term residencies and collaborations that helped build trust, visibility and connection between groups across the town
This work fed into a final community consultation event and a series of reflective sessions for the project’s team with an independent arts consultant, Susan Coughlan of Art of Change, which identified key learnings and priorities for a potential new phase – including the importance of consistent local coordination, youth engagement, support for local artists, and using creativity to strengthen inclusion in a changing rural community.
Local steering committee rooted in community partnerships
Creative Places Ballaghaderreen is guided by a local Steering Committee with representation from across the town, including:
● Ballaghaderreen Community Art Group & Local Artists Group
● Brothers of Charity
● Foróige, GRETB / education partners
● Ballaghaderreen Town Team
● Ballaghaderreen Family Resource Centre
● Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival & Edmondstown House
● Roscommon LEADER Partnership
● Roscommon County Council (Arts, Housing, Heritage, Libraries, Community)
● Other local youth and community organisations and agencies working in the area
This broad partnership model reflects the reality of rural life in Ballaghaderreen, where arts, community development, social inclusion and local economic renewal are closely interlinked. The Steering Committee will continue to shape and oversee the programme, ensuring that local voices remain at the heart of decision-making.

Image Above L-R: Joanna Hopkins (Coordinator) with Steering Group members Vivienne Moran (Creative Arts Coordinator, Brothers of Charity); Jolanda Van Herk (Community Art Group Ballaghaderreen, Chairperson & Local Artists Group member); Niamh McGarry (Ballaghaderreen Town Team); Mary Smyth (Public Art & Engagement Coordinator, Roscommon County Council); Patricia Madden (SICAP Co-ordinator, Roscommon Leader Partnership).
From research to a three-year rural arts and development programme
The successful application for the new three-year phase was developed by Mary Smyth, Public Art & Engagement Coordinator with Roscommon County Council, with support from Rhona McGrath, Arts Officer, and partners including Roscommon LEADER Partnership and the local Steering Group. Their work secured a Creative Places Seed Award from The Arts Council to continue and deepen the programme in Ballaghaderreen from 2025–2028.
Over the coming three years the Creative Places Ballaghaderreen will:
● Appoint a three-year Artist-Researcher to continue long-term, embedded work with community groups
● Keep Artists centre to the delivery through artist residencies in various organisations and communities
● Develop a Youth Pillar with young people, schools, and youth organisations to co-design arts activity and signpost creative career pathways
● Support a growing network of local artists, including mentoring and collaborative opportunities
● Connect with wider rural development initiatives such as housing regeneration and the emerging An Bealach innovation hub, ensuring creativity is part of how the town plans its future
● Link and support existing cultural strengths
Following the national launch, Rhona McGrath, Arts Officer, commented “Roscommon County Council, together with the Steering Group and other project stakeholders, is looking forward to shaping lasting and strategic arts activity with local voices at the core. Over the next three years, Creative Places will help us strengthen creative collaboration in many communities and organisations in Ballaghaderreen.”

Image Above: Joanna Hopkins (Creative Places Ballaghaderreen Coordinator), Mary Smyth (Public Art & Engagement Coordinator, Roscommon County Council) and Katie Lowry (Head of Local and Place Partnerships, Arts Council) at the recent 'Art of Place – A symposium exploring people, possibilities and practice' hosted at Rua Red, Tallaght hosted by The Arts Council, in collaboration with Create and Creative Places MacUíllíam, October 23rd 2025. Picture credit: Conor Keegan.
Introducing Project Coordinator, Joanna Hopkins
The newly appointed Project Coordinator, Joanna Hopkins, will play a central role in weaving these strands together on the ground in Ballaghaderreen.
Joanna is an award-winning visual artist and arts project leader with over 15 years experience in socially engaged practice, community-led arts and cross-sector collaboration. Originally from Co. Mayo, she has led participatory projects, public art commissions and artist residencies across Ireland, including:
● Little Fields (2024, Grangegorman)
● A Special Area of ConVersation (2019, Fingal)
● The Marram Meitheal, Tir Saile (2017, Mayo)
Her recent project Potatoes and Pickles with residents of Beaufort Nursing Home in Meath – supported by Solstice Arts Centre and funded through CREATE’s Artist in the Community Scheme – combined growing, cooking and shared meals over nine months, and was recognised through the Age & Opportunity / Nursing Homes Ireland National Arts in Nursing Homes Day Award.
Joanna holds a BA in Fine Art and an MA in Social Practice & the Creative Environment from Limerick School of Art and Design. She brings substantial experience of working with County Council Arts Offices, Creative Ireland, public art commissions and the Arts Council of Ireland – a strong fit for a role that bridges arts, rural development and community change.
The Project Coordinator role is hosted in partnership with Roscommon LEADER Partnership, giving Joanna a base in the town and direct day-to-day connection with local communities, services and development initiatives.
Joanna’s vision for Creative Places Ballaghaderreen

Speaking about her appointment, Joanna Hopkins said:
“I believe in meaningful community consultation and participation, and I’m passionate about working with people to shape the arts where they live. Ballaghaderreen is a town with huge creativity, resilience and diversity, and I’m honoured to support the next phase of Creative Places here.
Over the coming three years I’m excited to work alongside local residents, artists, community groups and agencies to build projects that are rooted in the town – from long-term artist residencies and youth-led initiatives to new ways of gathering, making and celebrating together. My hope is that this programme will strengthen connections across the community, support local artists to thrive, and help ensure that creativity is recognised as a vital part of Ballaghaderreen’s development and future.”
Image Left: Joanna Hopkins (Creative Places Ballaghaderreen Coordinator) and Katie Lowry (Head of Local and Place Partnerships, Arts Council) at 'Art of Place – Symposium', October 23rd 2025. Picture credit: Conor Keegan.
Find out more & get involved
Community members, artists and organisations in Ballaghaderreen and surrounding areas are warmly invited to connect with the programme, hear more about upcoming opportunities, and share their ideas for the next phase.
● Website: Creative Places Ballaghaderreen – via Roscommon County Council Arts Office
● Facebook: Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
● Instagram: @creative_placesballaghaderreen
● Email:joannahopkins@ridc.ie
Press & further information:
Niamh McGarry Chair, Ballaghaderreen Town Team
ballaghaderreentt@gmail.com
087 3313492

Findings from Year One in Ballagh



Key Reflection from the year: Give time for relationships and ideas to form and develop.
The project engaged Artist-Researchers Nollaig Molloy, Julie Sharkey and Anna King in year-long residencies to deliver socially engaged sessions with the local community. A wide array of different workshops and events happened during the year as part of Creative Places Ballaghaderreen.
The year really highlighted the need for TIME to engage with a community. For the Artist-Researchers this meant slowing down, meeting people where they are at and flexibility in their approaches to deliver creative workshops and responsive events.
Having a longer residency meant there was the opportunity to work in this slow, reflective way which allowed things to grow organically. Artist-Researcher Nollaig described it as to “work at the speed of building trust.” Artist-Researcher Julie reflected “to have a plan and then let go of the plan.”
Julie worked with the Ballaghaderreen Family Resource Centre where a small group of four women was formed ‘Circle do Mná / Women's Circle’ from Ukraine, Netherlands and Ireland. This small group offered a safe space to explore each other's stories and reasons for coming to Ireland. Over 4 weeks, they imagined and developed characters, created stories from photographs, tried Object Theatre and improvised, wrote sensory and acrostic poems and discussed the influence music has on storytelling.
The local steering group met quarterly considering the programme as it developed and proposed steps to widen the audience getting involved. Going directly to targeted groups and organisations helped access to the arts, including more of the community in the programme.


Rich Heritage: Celebrating the area's Resources and Reconnecting with Place
Looking to the past, exploring the place and heritage of Ballaghaderreen, it was the tangible (sites and objects) and intangible heritage (memories, stories and local figures) that are important themes and of interest to the people of Ballaghaderreen.
Throughout the year we celebrated the resources already in the area. From feedback, this reconnection with place had people appreciating it anew through the eyes of a non-local. For some they got to visit sites within their locality they had never been to before. This was particularly evident on the reflective walks around local heritage spots led by Anna.
The Cut, was an outdoor event collaboratively developed by Anna and Nollaig. Placing the site in its historical context, an area which fuelled a hydro turbine powering the town from 1913 to the early 1930's, Nollaig shared archive materials on the origins and construction the site. It also housed an an outdoor swimming pool, once a focal point for gathering and interaction for the community in the 1970s and 1980s. Anna, who also discussed the symbolism of the river, invited the community to share personal stories about the pool. These narratives highlighted the profound and enduring bond between people and place.
Bringing the site into the present, a catchment scientist from LAWPRO (Local Access Water Programme) Noreen Shyrane provided an environmental observation by discussing the water quality of the Lung and demonstrated how to test water. Nollaig then hosted a workshop with clay sourced from the Cut, which literally connected participants to the space, and the event concluded with local artists presented their own artwork influenced by the area, showcasing how the site still continues to inspire.
Linking heritage to contemporary issues, such as the environment / climate crisis, is valuable. For St Nathy’s Green Schools Project Biodiversity Day, Anna delivered a workshop on Cultivating Hope in an Environmental Crisis for young people.
The arts enable people to express, reflect on the past and empower as they navigate local issues. The Artist-Researchers encountered themes of loneliness and disconnect. There is sadness from loss of community and heritage spaces and a fear of unique local knowledge disappearing.
During the Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival, Nollaig shared research through photography, film and conversation on the history, contents and workers of the local Powerhouse building. It drew attention to the connections between people, archive objects, land and industry: “Brilliant feedback from this expo. A real ‘Trip back in time’. Great memories of bygone Ballagh days” – feedback from Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival 24.
Anna's Reflective Heritage Exhibition included heartfelt contributions from the community - audio recorded stories and memories, vintage photos from the Michael Gallagher Collection, donated memorabilia by local residents, as well as folklore gathered during the residency: “The feedback has been incredible. Some serious historical and nostalgic chords hit at the Reflective Walk and Exhibition in The Shambles. Well done to Anna King & Eithne Gallagher Photos for a tangible trip back in time #brilliant” – feedback from Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival 24.
“A lovely, beautifully presented nostalgic look at old Ballaghaderreen” – Online public comment.
There is an appetite for activities and events which preserve and reimagine the local heritage and make Ballagh’s history living and interactive. Working with St Nathys, Anna began an exploration of local historical figure Anna Deane (1834-1905), a pioneering entrepreneur, philanthropist, and a key figure in the fight for tenants’ rights in Ireland. This research has developed into an ongoing 2025 Creative Ireland project titled ‘The Cherry Blossom Tales’.
It was clear during the year that a broad view of art and culture - to include wellness, heritage, landscape and the social history of Ballaghaderreen and reconnecting with place - is a good fit here.


Connection - Opportunities and Spaces to gather and get to know each other, to connect and collaborate, and showcase and share
There is tremendous support available in the area. Taking time to walk around the community, meet people for tea and build trust was extremely important, it then gained momentum. A sense of community passion and spirit was evident at events such as the Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival, Rambling House and Culture Night in Edmondstown and 3-of-Arts Showcase.
During the consultation event, the Creative Places approach was noted to have enabled community conversations in a different way. As the year went on, more people joined the journey as we all came to better understand the potential for Creative Places Ballaghaderreen. It acted as a frame for different groups, bringing them together to creatively imagine what a Creative Place in Ballaghaderreen could be:
“Because it kind of held the groups together. It’s given us a frame, it holds us close… and there's more of a buzz around the place with the arts especially.” - Local at the Community Consultation event.
The importance of public and community spaces for local gathering was continually highlighted to help forge relationships, create a sense of community and belonging, share knowledge and resources, celebrate their unique heritage, and for local artists to meet and collaborate with each other. We connected with the Ballaghaderreen Community Garden, which is a valuable community focal point and outdoor location used by numerous different community groups. The relationship between artists and their own community was also highlighted.
Julie held drama sessions with Brothers of Charity, Ballaghaderreen, and the group grew in size to include service users from the hinterlands of Castlerea, Boyle and Strokestown. They mapped out the businesses from one end of the town to the next, places they loved, places they didn’t, places they often went to or hardly went to.
For St Bridget’s Day, Nollaig used locally-collected rushes for paper-making sessions incorporating dried, flower petals, seed, and plants; and during St Nathy’s Biodiversity day she held hedgerow clay workshops. Both aimed to ignite interest and awareness of natural resources, time and labour in the area. With Ballaghaderreen Mens Shed she underwent mind-mapping, research into townlands and archive materials, site visits, and held memory object activities; and she hosted print workshops with participants at the Emergency Reception and Orientation Centre (EROC) centre. These sessions led onto other activities at the centre, such as Pyrography wood-burning workshops with artist Vincent Hunt.
The unique characteristics about Ballaghaderreen in the community survey were THE PEOPLE and the DIVERSITY IN THE AREA. In workshop responses, people noted making new connections. It was also shared that it can be difficult to find places to mix, particularly for those whose first language is not English.
Pop-up events gave people a taste of creativity and by creating indirect ways for people to meet these are good structures to facilitate community connection. Artists also noted the value in having consistent, visible points of contact on the ground coordinating and hosting local activities.


Local Creative Talent
A growing local artist network began to develop through various avenues: bi-monthly Artist Meets, a local artist WhatsApp group (hosted by the town team) and mailing list. This network highlighted that artists want more opportunities to meet, have space to show and make work, and want to build connections and collaborate with each other. It is an eager, diverse, multi-skilled group and could be a creative nucleus for development in the local arts scene:
“....this needs gentle fostering and encouragement in order to flourish once again. Artists working amongst the community is a crucial keystone in doing so and injects some vital inspiration and optimism in Ballagh’s artistic scene.” - Local artist feedback
It is important to invest in supporting local artists’ connectivity. One such highlight was the 3-of-Arts Collaborative Commission which engaged 9 local artists into 3 teams of different disciplines Visual, Literature and Music, and to inform each other's work. In keeping with the programme themes they responded to the phrase ‘This is the Place’. It showcased to the public on Culture Night, at Spells Bar. The response was positive from both the commissioned artists, particularly around inspiring each other, and the audience. An online leaflet is available here: 3 of Arts Collaborative Arts Commission 2024 | Flipbook
Artists having opportunities to meet up can have ripples such as the Local Artist Exhibition led by the established Ballaghaderreen Community Art Group, which included work from around 33 different artists held during the Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival August 2024.
Other groups and established organisations in the area were also supported during the year in funding, or as partner to larger Arts Council applications to expand events. Such as the Culture Night Late @ the Palace event with Slí na Croí and Edmondstown House.


Buzz about Ballagh
People need and appreciate good news stories. The online presence, documentation and showcase of events and workshops is helping to contribute to a referred ‘Buzz About Ballagh’. This is good promotion for the town, and can contribute to reframing the narrative of the area.
It is important to continue exploring best approaches to increase visibility and accessibility of art and culture in the town.
Having the Artist Researchers share their reflections from events helps to build momentum after the events are finished and allows them echoes, another life with those who could not attend with an opportunity to see what happened. Have a look at the Online Heritage Exhibition and this video Youtube: This Place is a Powerhouse on the Powerhouse building, both stemming from live-events held during the Ballaghaderreen Arts festival. We also have a Year 1 Project Blog by artist-researcher Dr. Anna King.
Podcast episodes sharing local artists’ practices is invaluable promotion for artists. Check out this episode on local visual artist Maria May, created by Artist-Researcher Anna King: PLACEWAYS Podcast
“Provided me as an artist with plenty of exposure on my practice as well as ways to connect it further with local area and community” – Local Artist

Events
October / November Events
You are invited to our final community consultation event as part of Creative Places Ballaghaderreen R&D.
Located in St. Nathy's Hall, Ballaghaderreen.

Schedule:
- ARTS ACTIVITIES FEEDBACK SESSION - 11.30am to 1.15pm - Take part and enjoy some reflective arts activities facilitated by artists Dani Gill and Conor Burke including trail, word clouds, Ballaghaderreen mapping and wishes for the future!
- 1.15pm. Mindfulness and intention activity with Anna King.
- CELEBRATION AFTERNOON - 1.30pm to 2.30pm - Enjoy some imagery from the year, Chats and Tea/Coffee & Lunch Refreshments available.
Thank you to all who attended our final community consultation event!





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The next Artist Meet will be held at the Shambles Ballaghaderreen on Saturday 12th October 11am - 12.30pm.

Get to know creatives and artists living in and around Ballaghaderreen.

There is an opportunity for two artists to share their work and process to the group.

We will be chatting about the year with Creative Places Ballaghaderreen, and the Artist Network what is the future and what do you hope from it if it continues?
Small refreshments available. Come along and bring a friend!
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Launch of PLACEWAYS podcast
Anna King in collaboration with Creative Places Ballaghaderreen
Welcome to PLACEWAYS, an art podcast series hosted by Dr. Anna King in collaboration with Creative Places Ballaghaderreen. This podcast explores the intricate ways in which places are known, imagined, felt, and remembered. With a conversational and intimate style, the podcast will feature artists, creatives and community stories - both personal and collective.
In this debut episode, we are delighted to be joined by the talented visual artist Maria May. Together, we will uncover how her work reflects deep connections to place, and how her art helped her navigated her way through personal grief.
Available: Link to PLACEWAYS Podcast

Image above - ‘For You’, An Immersive Artwork. Copyright: Maria May - No copy is allowed without permission.
If you would like to get involved, email Anna: creativeplacesballagh@gmail.com
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Open Call: Community Consultation Commission
Creative Installation or Activity
Deadline for Proposal: 3pm Friday 11th October.
Event date for installation / activity: 10th November 2024.
Award: An award of €2,500 is available for one artist or divided among a group of artists, depending on proposals.

Commission Brief available: Commission Brief click here
Submissions should be 2 pages max. Visuals where relevant are welcomed.
The successful proposal/s will be considered by members of the project Steering Group together with Roscommon County Council Arts Office based on the following criteria:
• Reflect on its relevance to the Creative Places R&D phase (40/100);
• Engagement with the community (40/100);
• Artist/Creative experience (20/100).
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September Events
The Cut at the Lung River
RESCHEDULED: Sunday 22 September, 12pm - 14.30pm

You are warmly invited to drop-in and attend the event 'The Cut' on the banks of the Lung River, by artist-researchers Nollaig Molloy and Anna King.
https://www.heritageweek.ie/event-listings/the-cut-on-the-lung-river
Nollaig will explore the origins and construction of 'The Cut' on the river, a site which fueled a hydro turbine that powered the town of Ballaghaderreen from 1913 to the early 1930's. Together with archival material, locally dug clay, local sharing of knowledge and environmental observations with the presence of a catchment scientist from LAWPRO (Local Access Water Programme), she will present tangible discoveries of place, natural resources and community.
Anna will reflect upon the symbolism of the Lung River, which represents the timeless flow of life weaving through land and townscapes, nourishing ecosystems, and connecting communities. She will draw on personal stories from the Ballaghaderreen community about 'The Cut’s' outdoor swimming pool, once a focal point for gathering and interaction in the 1970s and 1980s. These narratives will highlight the profound relevance of 'PLACEWAYS' and the enduring bond between people and place.
Note: The event is located in a field with areas of uneven terrain, please dress appropriately for the site and weather. There is limited car parking available. No booking required.

Images from 'the Cut' event

Above Image: In a field near the Cut on the Lung River, a group gather to reflect upon the symbolism of the Lung River
and the memories of the space. People were invited to share with the group. Image Credit Nollaig Molloy.

Above Image: Nollaig's research on the Power House and Lung River.

Above Image: LAWPRO scientist Noreen Shyrane discussing water quality of the Lung, how to test water, and LAWPRO projects. Image Credit Nollaig Molloy.

Above Image: Items created by participants of Nollaig's clay workshop. Image Credit Nollaig Molloy.

Above Image: Local artist's reflections of the Lung River, Conor O'Connell painting. Image Credit Nollaig Molloy.
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Culture Night @ the Palace
Mark your calendars for Culture Night @ the Palace at Edmondstown House with Slí na Croí.
Building on the success of the music event held there as part of Culture Night 2023, this open-to-all festival event will be held Friday 20th September!
Enjoy Music acts, stalls, Ballaghaderreen Community Art Group installation and experience the Creative Places Ballagh 3-of-Arts Collaborative Artist Commission.
For more information: https://www.creativeireland.gov.ie/en/event/creative-places-ballaghaderreen-culture-night-the-palace/


Creative Places Ballaghaderreen presents……
3of

Arts
A unique live event showcasing the collaborative work of artists from three different art disciplines.

Culture Night Sept 20th

Spells Bar

6pm – 7.30pm
Finishing on time to catch the FREE bus from town to continue your night at Edmondstown House for
Culture Night @ The Palace

Bus must be booked with reception@theshambles.ie or call 0949862565.
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3of

Arts is a culmination of over 3 months of an inclusive, collaborative artistic project.
Visual artists will unveil original art works based on the theme 'This Must Be the Place'.
Writers and musicians will then present the writing and music they have created in response to this original art work



The audience will have an opportunity to see and hear first-hand the inspiration, thought process and creative energy that is required to produce original art works in any form.
A glorious celebration of Ballaghaderreen artists original work.
Visual Artists:
Eithne Gallagher
Conor O’Connell
Maria May Fleming
Writers:
Joe Egan
Geraldine Finn
Jane Casey
Musicians:
Wes Pollington
Chloe Ewings
Regina McDermott
Images from 3of
Arts event.
Image Credit: Marek Patrovic.







Leaflet created outlining the artists experience collaborating and reflections on their own thought process to create a response form it.
View on: 3 of Arts Collaborative Arts Commission 2024 | PDF to Flipbook

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August Events
The Rambling House
Friday 30th August -8pm to Late
Spells Bar, Ballaghaderreen.


On Friday 30th August, we enjoyed an impromptu evening of storytelling, song, performance and more, at
Spells Bar Ballaghaderreen for 'The Rambling House'️!
A rambling house was an important community element in rural Ireland. Long before TV or the Internet, folk in Ireland had to entertain each other to get through the long nights. Certain houses in a locality became known as Rambling Houses where the community would gather to be entertained, educated and informed - people
rambled on in, no invite was needed, no guest turned away.
This event developed from feedback through our ongoing engagement in Ballaghaderreen with Creative Places, for more opportunities to meet and share with people in the locality.
Storyteller Vincent Pierse started the evening with stories and poetry full of humour and heart, followed by open mic slots, new music by Lee Regan of Diaspora and much-anticipated ‘Brideshead’ a play starring Anne Marie Staunton, Edwina Rushe and Lorna Duffy.
Thank you to everyone who contributed to the night through the open mic slots. The evening was full of surprise

and emotion with witty spoken words and poetry, vulnerable stories and songs

, traditional music, and even a spontaneous auctioneering section!


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Rambling House Survey:
If you attended this event, can you help us capture the experience of the Rambling House through your feedback on this form:________________________________________________________
Images from the Rambling House
Image Credit: Marek Patrovic.
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Saturday 10 August, as part of the Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival:
THIS ARCHIVE IS A POWERHOUSE



THIS ARCHIVE IS A POWERHOUSE is a Photography exhibition and conversational talk at Chapel Street, Ballaghaderreen. Nollaig Molloy has been researching the building's history, its contents and the people who worked there. To celebrate its history this event will draw attention to connections between people, archive objects, land and industry through photography and conversation. Drop in from 12pm - 3pm, with a Conversational talk on the exhibition with the artist 2pm-3pm. Tickets: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/ballaghaderreenartsfestival/1292838?
THANK YOU to everyone you attended. Watch this video on the history and interior of the building: https://youtu.be/EF5JWEZZjPw?si=E--cQAM_W-7PapCz

Above credit Marek Petrovič Photography: Nollaig discussing with group the history of the building.


Above credit Image 1 & 2. Mary Smyth: Postcards of the museum artefacts by Nollaig Molloy available to visitors ; Newscuttings and articles on the history of the buildings use as a Powerhouse and school building. Image 3. Eithne Gallagher Photos: Group looking at the information.

Above credit Marek Petrovič Photography: Group discussing the building.



Above credit Images 1-5. Eithne Gallagher Photos; Image 6 credit Marek Petrovič Photography: Inside the Powerhouse.
PLACEWAYS – Heritage Exhibition and Walk

Step back in time and immerse yourself in the rich history of Ballaghaderreen with Dr. Anna King's heritage walk beginning from 11.30am at The Creamery, followed by a unique exhibition at the Shambles curated in collaboration with Eithne Gallagher from 12.15pm.
This 'must-see' exhibition includes heartfelt contributions from our local community - a series of audio recorded stories, memories, vintage photos from the Michael Gallagher Collection, and memorabilia donated by local residents - as well as the stories and folklore gathered during Anna's artist residency.
The walk and exhibition were fully booked, but an online version of the Reflective Heritage Exhibition is now LIVE at:
https://www.annaking.ie/a-placeways-diary/creative-places-ballaghaderreen







Image credit: Eithne Gallagher Photos.
Park Life
Park Life @The Community Garden Featuring an all-Ballaghaderreen cast, Park Life comprises three short 15 – 20-minute plays written and directed by Julie Sharkey.
Extra showings added for Saturday 10th & Sunday 11th August @ 11am & 1pm. Booked out.

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Local Artist Exhibition
Opening Monday 5th August.
There is still time to catch the wonderful Local Artist Exhibition in the Phoenix Centre as part of the Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival.
The exhibition is organised by Community Art Group Ballaghaderreen, which invited all local artists. There is a wide variety of work from paintings to photos and from sculptures to writing.
More than 25 artists from different backgrounds are participating, showcasing the huge amount of talent in the Ballaghaderreen area!
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July Events


5 week En Plein Air Painting workshop
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DROP IN - Meet Anna & Share Your Stories 



Date: July 8th
Time: Anytime Between 5pm - 7.30pm
Anna - in collaboration with Eithne Gallagher Photos is collecting stories about Monica Duff's store, and she needs your help!
Pop in for an informal chat about your experiences & memories of Mon Duff's. We are also looking for physical items like bottles, labels, and anything else from the store, which will be displayed at the Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival (items will be safely returned).
This project is a fantastic opportunity to celebrate our community & local heritage through shared memories & curated artifacts.
It is part of a larger project that is 'Celebrating the Life of Anne Deane' with St Nathy’s College. For more info, check out PLACEWAYS at
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May Events
St. Nathy's College Ongoing School Engagement:
Anne Deane - In collaboration with St. Nathy’s College, we are honored to celebrate the remarkable life of Anne Deane (1834-1905), a pioneering entrepreneur, philanthropist, and a key figure in the fight for tenants rights in Ireland. Over the coming months, Anna will be curating a series of blogs with visual stories, videos, and insightful audio clips bringing to life the research gathered on Anne Deane. Anna arranged a trip to Straide Abbey, where Anne is buried, Michael Davitt Museum with St. Nathy’s 2nd Class Art Students. We will have a physical exhibition in the Autumn for family, friends and our local community.


May 16th Biodiversity Day - St Nathy’s College invited Anna King and Nollaig Molloy to their ‘Biodiversity Day of Action.’ Anna facilitated a workshop on Cultivating Compassion & Hope During an Environmental Crisis - she has written a blog on the day. Nollaig facilitated a Hedgerow clay-making workshop.
Article by Caroline O’Doherty, Irish Independent Environment Correspondent, outlining the day, panel discussions and workshops.


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Community Survey open - focused on Creativity in Ballagh.
Scan code in relevant language to fill, and you will be automatically added into a draw for two SEASON PASSES to this year's Ballaghaderreen Arts Festival!

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Ballaghaderreen May Day Fair

May 1st: Creative Workshops at the May Day Fair, Drama with Julie Sharkey and coil potting with Alclayme.

April Events

Tuesday 9th: Sense of Place Workshop, Ballaghaderreen Family Resource Centre
Thursday 11th: Artist Meet at Durkins
Saturday 13th: Sense of Place Workshop, The Shambles
April 30th: 6-week free Drumming Workshops with Slí na Croí begin at the Ozanam Centre

After the four ‘PLACEWAYS’ events are completed in March, Anna will return to the sites and gather items that represent the six senses, for her upcoming ‘Senses of Place Workshop.’
For more information on this event, and to book a space on the workshop see: https://www.annaking.ie/artistresearch-residency/creativeplaces
March Events
Women's Circle, Introduction to Drama with Julie Sharkey
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PLACEWAYS: MAPPING OUR RELATIONSHIP WITH PLACE - with Anna King.


The Ballagh community is warmly invited to join Anna in tracing a series of ‘PLACEWAYS’ during four contemplative walks which are commencing on March 6th. As participants navigate their way with Anna through the landscape, they will be encouraged to observe and describe various elements of their surroundings through their senses: plants, natural features, waterways, shapes, shadows, and structures.
While pathways refer to both tangible and observable routes taken to navigate through space, ‘PLACEWAYS’ also include the cultural, social, and emotional dimensions of people's relationships with a place. This might include the rituals, memories, stories, and personal connections associated with a particular location or may include how people perceive and interact with a place.
Each Walk Takes Approx 1 Hour 30 mins. The meeting point for the walk will be announced the week before the walk is due to take place. Keep an eye on our social media page for regular updates. Walk routes below.

Each walk starts at a unique cardinal direction (North, East, South, West) and we will trace our way to the Ballaghaderreen Community Garden.
See attached images for further information regarding the PLACEWAYS project and walk routes start locations, times and routes available on the attached. All routes end in the Community Garden.
Dates:
- Weds 6th March - 11.30am - East
- Sat 9th March - 2pm - South
- Tues 12th March - 11.30am - West
- Sat 23th March – 2pm – Additional walk for those with transport: Edmondstown House
- Sat 23th March – 2.45pm - North

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February Events
Thursday 1st February - book in for Papermaking at the Phoenix Youth Centre to celebrate Imbolc / St. Bridget's Day with artist Nollaig Molloy. 086 306 0539
Saturday 3rd February - An informal Artist Meet up at Durkins in Ballaghaderreen, 11-12pm.

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Launch of Creative Places Ballaghaderreen

Square One Café, The Square, Ballaghaderreen, Co. Roscommon.
Date: Saturday, 25th November 2023
Time: 3pm – 6pm
Creative Places Ballaghaderreen is a one-year research & development arts project in its initial phase of development. The project will involve artists Nollaig Molloy, Julie Sharkey and Anna King using socially engaged art practices to explore how local businesses, community groups and individuals can develop an inclusive, sustainable arts programme for the local area. The artists will work closely with Mary Smyth, who will coordinate the project on behalf of Roscommon County Council Arts Office.
The team are keen to meet professional and non-professional artists (from all disciplines), as well as members of the general public who are interested in how the arts can contribute to building a strong local economy and community. "We aim to represent as many interests as possible: you may have an interest in the history of the GAA, or the role of art-based initiatives for improving bio-diversity, health and well-being; you might wish to work on a project that values the importance of place-making and heritage, or - how to develop Ballaghaderren’s built environment for more inclusive lived-experiences. All ideas are welcome!”
“Please come along and share your dreams and creative aspirations with us over a cuppa. Together we will work towards curating a unique portfolio of arts programmes that will showcase Ballaghaderreen’s incredible talent, rich local history and prolific cultural resources. We very much look forward to meeting you all - The kettle is on!” - Nollaig, Julie and Anna.
Creative Places Ballaghaderreen is funded by the Arts Council and supported by Roscommon County Council in association with a steering committee made up of local groups from the area. Our approach aims to build on existing cultural strengths, and is guided by inclusive community principles.
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September 2023 Update

The Arts Team with a Steering group of local representatives are excited
to welcome and introduce the projects Artist Researchers.

Dr. Anna King
Website: www.annaking.ie
Anna is a published author with over 20 years experience as a content curator, freelance journalist and creative writer. A fully qualified (PhD) ethnographer she has extensive practical experience of working with arts-based action research methods.
Her thesis: An Alternative Gathering: Public Space and Shared Agency in the Lived Experience of Multicultural Ireland was fully funded by a highly prestigious Irish Research Council Award. It explored the importance of place, heritage and arts-based methodologies in building communities in culturally diverse social settings.
Nollaig Molloy
Website: www.nollaigmolloy.com
Nollaig is a visual artist working with sculptural installation, animation, video and performance. She has extensive experience in collaborative and participatory arts with younger and older people. Over the past few years, she has worked as an artist and researcher on various projects which have investigated intersections between art making, craft, land use and archives.
Site-specific interests are formed from an exploration into 'materials-to-hand'; natural materials gleaned from the land which have fueled folk and industrial customs, local stories and language, and from speaking with experts in many fields which contribute to the research and in developing artistic ideas. Nollaig wishes to experiment with methodologies working with the community to build a sense of ownership with the place.

Julie Sharkey
Julie is a theatre maker, drama facilitator from Ballaghaderreen. Recent theatre work includes a National Tour of her first play written for 5 – 8 year olds: An Ant Called Amy (Oct 2022), co-produced by Roscommon Arts Centre with support from Arts Council of Ireland; and a main role in In the Midst of Plenty (June 2022) a new folk musical by Amy Day.
For nearly twenty years, she has worked in the area of Arts and Disability with the HSE in Cork and more recently with Daughters of Charity and St. Michael’s House in Dublin.
She works predominantly through drama and story and feels this opportunity allows the needed time to create connection, develop trust and to create a vision for Creative Places Ballaghaderreen. She was part of the development of Ballaghaderreen's first arts festival this August 'BallaghDream Arts Fest' and believes the area is craving for positive cultural and creative activity.
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June 2023
Ballaghaderreen awarded Research & Development Award under
Creative Places / Cumas Ceantar from the Arts Council, November 2023 - November 2024.
Project Statement
Research & Development Award in Ballaghaderreen, where opportunities to take part in the arts are not on a scale consistent with the town size; will examine the cultural strengths, interests and needs of Ballaghaderreen through participatory action-research with a Steering Group of nominated representatives from local organisations, and will develop a foundation of socially engaged arts practice with an Artist-Research Team to support the creativity of a growing, diverse community.

Project Announcement
The town of Ballaghaderreen is one of seven locations set to benefit from Arts Council funding as part of a Creative Places initiative worth a total of €1.7m to be shared between the successful applicants.
This announcement brings to a total of seventeen the number of Creative Places funded since 2020. Ballaghaderreen is one of three locations to receive research awards to develop their ‘Creative Places’ along with Edgeworthstown in County Longford and Ballyconnell in County Cavan also to receive funding.
The funding enables artists to work with local businesses, community groups and individuals enabling sustained and vibrant cultural activity in the chosen areas. The Arts Council’s funding to date amounts to €4m, building from the launch of the Creative Places pilot in Tuam in 2020.
Welcoming the announcement, Rhona McGrath, Arts Officer with Roscommon County Council said her office together with local partners are delighted to have been successful in receive the Creative Place R&D project funding will enable work to begin this summer.
“Roscommon County Council Arts Office is thrilled to receive funding for Creative Places R&D. We are working as part a diverse group of committed partners to consider investment in community-focused arts research. This funding will help address the current lack of arts infrastructure and provision in Ballaghaderreen. Our vision is to Build a Better Ballaghaderreen where the arts and creativity are central to a vibrant, diverse and proud community”, said Ms. McGrath.
A spokesperson for the Creative Places Ballaghaderreen Working Group has expressed their organisation's delight on receiving funding, claiming the announcement “will contribute to a wider, diverse effort to improve local opportunities to engage in the arts. In particular the funding will enable a better understanding of the evolving and new community profile in the Ballaghaderreen area and its particular interests and needs in relation to arts and culture”, said the local spokesperson.
Creative Places is an opportunity for places to build local arts programmes which will benefit all people who live in these areas and communities. It builds on existing cultural strengths by enabling local artists to lead an inclusive, diverse programme that is rooted in socially engaged practice and community development principles.
The Arts Council-led programme is underpinned by a commitment in its Making Great Art Work 2016–2025 strategy to increase engagement in the arts, whereby the Arts Council invests directly in a place and its people, working with key local partners to uncover each location’s key assets, resources and ambitions.
Director of the Arts Council, Maureen Kennelly, said her organisation was “committed to a vision of access to the arts no matter where you live in Ireland. Our Creative Places programme is critical for the Arts Council, as it gives people access to the arts in their own communities for the first time. This is an artist-led programme but is collaborative in nature, and we could not do this without the commitment of local agencies, which include local authorities, community development organisations, arts organisations and local communities themselves”, said Ms. Kennelly.