Made Public
Catalyst Arts Library
17 May - 18 June 2022
Opens: Tuesday 17 May, 5-7pm
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Made Public is a project that explores Catalyst Arts’ library, bringing the resource to life through a number of events, workshops and readings. The project centres around the library as a space for encounter and collective conversation, as well as a space that reflects our yearly programme. For a full list of events, see below.
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Throughout the past few months our library has been displaced, moved from our previous premises at 5 College Court to 6 Joy’s Entry. This provided an opportunity to interact with the resource in a different way as books, pamphlets, zines and broadsheets were moved from shelves, and packed into boxes.
Whilst unpacking these boxes we discussed the ways in which the library could be used as a collective resource, and we decided to take this time to open up the Catalyst Arts library to the public by installing it in our main gallery and hosting a series of events. Through this we hope to explore the library as an open and inclusive resource, one that can be reflective of collective practices and bring people together through conversations.
The Catalyst Arts library is a unique entity (as all libraries are), collected almost haphazardly by past directors; it is a study in all the extraordinary thinking and research that has happened over the last 29 years, and in all of the artists who have exhibited, performed, curated and written for, Catalyst Arts. And the beautiful nature of libraries is that they contain multitudes, and we have found in this library books that reflect our own approaches and interests, from books exploring community, labour, materiality, poetry, the archive and architecture. We’ve encountered books we have read, and books we never knew existed, guided, as Ciaran Carson might have it, by the ‘library angel’.
With Made Public, we hope to expand the library, not just through adding more publications (by asking what and who is missing), but by allowing it to create new experiences and encounters. Reading as an act of transformation, interpretation and creation.