Oh Infamy –
we eat electric light
Lyónn Wolf & Iarlaith Ní Fheorais
Location:
Project Arts Centre, Dublin
Space:
Cube
Form:
15 min film on loop
Duration:
45mins
Date:
Friday May 9th
Start time:
9.15pm
Ticket price:
Free
Age: 18+
Oh – Infamy – we eat electric light is a film by Lyónn Wolf and Iarlaith Ní Fheorais, that is entangled with and disobedient to Circe, Episode 15 of James Joyce’s Ulysses.
A hallucinatory trip through the night time streets, we encounter otherworldly scenes of kink, justice, gender swapping, animism, and the troubling, unearthed through drag, dance, and text.
Mourning the lost magic of the night, Oh – Infamy – we eat electric light takes place on the site of Monto, Dublin’s sex work and nightlife district of old. The place where Bloom roves in hallucinatory states through Circe, and where we evoke phantoms of the past’s stomping demands for filthier futures. Oh – Infamy is a celebratory haunting of dirty auld Dublin and of Circe; an ode to the potential energies housed in ruin.
About the Artists
Lyónn Wolf is a trans, working class, visual artist, educator & writer making work intentionally shaped by economic necessity. They engage forms of recycling, thrift & ephemera, resulting in soft modularity, wild archiving & performative intervention, posing questions about value, accumulation & authorship. They see a cultural centring of thrift as part of a tradition of queer-working class vernacular & ethics, promiscuous & adept at working within limitations. Their pedagogical and publishing work posits the imagination as a political tool with radical potential that can exist & erupt anywhere at anytime.
Lyónn has developed a trilogy of works since 2014 dealing with queer economies and spatial politics. The Re-appropriation of Sensuality, Sex in Public, and Domestic Optimism have been exhibited through various iterations at: The Project Arts Centre Dublin, The Grazer Kunstverein, Steirischer Herbst Festival Graz, NCAD Gallery Dublin, Dundee Contemporary Arts, District Berlin, Den Frie Center Of Contemporary Art Copenhagen, nGbK Berlin, Archive Kabinet Berlin, Survival Kit Festival Riga and De Appel Amsterdam among other places.
Lyónn is co-founder of The Many Headed-Hydra (TMHH), aqueous-decolonising collective since 2015 working on long term critical and poly-vocal projects across the seas that connect Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Iceland, Germany, Ireland, Lithuania and beyond.
Lyónn is founder of The Reading Troupe – Disruptive Pedagogy, workshop and zine series since 2013. Disruptive pedagogical engagements include: National College for Art and Design Dublin (2020), Colomboscope Festival Sri Lanka (2019), CCA Glasgow (2019), Hamburger Bahnhof Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin (2018), Akademie der Künste der Welt, Cologne (2018), Gasworks, London (2017), Klöntal Triennale (2017), The Academy of Fine Arts Vienna (2017), The Universität der Künste Berlin (2017).
Lyónn recently published a book of artist writing with Scriptings Berlin, Archive Books Berlin/Milan 2021 & Eeclectic Publishing, they were recently a fellow with the Berliner Förderprogramm Künstlerische Forschung 2022/23.
Iarlaith Ní Fheorais is a curator, writer and an Independent Producer at field:arts, working with artists Bridget O’Gorman, Ebun Sodipo and Lyónn Wolf. She was the curator of 21st edition of TULCA Festival of Visual Art and curated Speech Sounds as Curator-in-Residence of VISUAL Carlow. She has written for publications including frieze magazine, Burlington Contemporary, Viscose Journal and Girls Like Us. She regularly contributes towards public programmes and lectures including at Somerset House, Rietveld Academie, KW Institute, Konstfack University, and Arts and Disability Ireland. She has sat on numerous selection panels including EVA Platform Commision 2025, Unlimited International Open Award and Edinburgh Arts Festival Platform 2023. She’s the author of the free online resource Access Toolkit for Artworkers.
Credits
In Partnership with Arts and Disability Ireland. Commissioned as part of Ulysses 2.2, produced by ANU Productions, Landmark, Museum of Literature Ireland, University College Dublin and National Library Ireland, and first shown at Oonagh Young Gallery Supported by the Arts Council / An Chomhairle Ealaíon’s Open Call Award