A Woman’s Work
Cultúir
- Cineál Tionscadail
- Digital Arts, Visual Arts
- Teideal
- A Woman’s Work
- Irish Partner
- Gallery of Photography Dublin
- Co-Partners
- FFotogallery, Wales (UK)
- Lithuanian Photography Artists' Union (Kaunas, Lithuania)
- Whack 'n' Bite (Finland)
- Fotosommer Stuttgart e.V. (Germany)
- Funding Strand
- Cooperation Projects
- Year Funded
- 2018
- Funding Amount
- €198,000
A Woman's Work will explore sectors such as the finance industry, media and telecommunications where women’s work is being re-defined through technological developments and post-globalism.
The cultural partners in the United Kingdom, Lithuania, Ireland, France, Finland and Germany will work together to:
- Enable artists and cultural professionals from across Europe to cooperate in the making new work about the changing face of women and work in Europe using both physical and online platforms
- Create new opportunities for artistic exchange within Europe, increasing the mobility of artists and cultural professionals by utilising collective networks to extend audience reach and the impact
- Use the European Prospects digital platform to present the project to a global audience, in order to stimulate discussion which challenges the dominant view of gender and industry in Europe, and to encourage and support further transnational co-operation beyond the life of the project.
During 2019/2020 a series of artist and curator commissions and residencies will be hosted by the partners. The first A Woman’s Work symposium was held in Cardiff in April 2019.
Irish partner, Gallery of Photography, Dublin, is the national centre for contemporary photography in Ireland. They showcase the best of contemporary Irish and international photography.
'Gallery of Photography Ireland’s involvement in A Woman’s Work was a fantastic opportunity for the organisation to engage with artists and other curators who are working on one of the pressing issues of our time. Working with EU partner organisations in a focussed way has enabled us to share our working practices and to learn directly from our European colleagues, particularly during the Covid_19 restrictions. A Woman’s Work has facilitated a more ambitious commissioning programme which has established firm foundations for future cooperation and exchange initiatives.'Across Borders Across the Board Vol 3 2017–2019