Professor Sarah Glennie ∙ Director

NCAD WORKS 2024 provides a portal to the full breadth of work by our extraordinary graduates from across our four schools of Fine Art, Design, Education, and Visual Culture and encompasses students graduating from our broad range of undergraduate, postgraduate, and CEAD programmes. 

Collectively, our graduates represent Ireland’s creative future, and they each hold great potential to play a dynamic and impactful role in the Ireland we face right now. As you will see from this work, our students want to fuel change in a creative and productive way, from how we design our public services to the way we see each other. 

They are emerging into their professional careers at an exciting time as new opportunities emerge in Ireland for creative graduates. The creative sector is one of the fastest growing in the global economy. Ireland’s creative graduates drive our creative and cultural sectors, which currently contribute 3.7% of Gross Added Value to the economy, with room to grow even more.

Our students are fully engaged with the world beyond the NCAD campus, and they continue to demonstrate their ambition and commitment to make work that has impact and meaning to us all in many different ways. The big challenges that face society can be traced across our graduates' work as they apply their creativity to bringing new solutions, critical thinking, and reflection onto issues including sustainability, gender identity and equality, wellbeing, new technologies, and our digital and material futures.  

An education at NCAD is the starting point for generations of bold and curious minds that have made an enormous contribution to society in many different ways. We are confident that this generation is set to continue this extraordinary legacy as they leave us equipped with the imagination, creativity, and critical thinking that will ensure that they make an impact in whatever path they follow. 

So, on behalf of An Bord and all my colleagues at NCAD – congratulations to all our graduating students; we are extremely proud of all that you have achieved, and we look forward to following your creative journeys in the future.

Thomas St Campus

100 Thomas Street
Directions

7–15 June

Fri 7 June 10am–8pm
Sat 8 June 10am–5pm
Sun 9 June 10am–5pm
Mon 10 June 10am–8pm
Tue 11 June 10am–8pm
Wed 12 June 10am–8pm
Thu 13 June 10am–8pm
Fri 14 June 10am–8pm
Sat 15 June 10am–5pm

Courses on show:

BA Fashion
BA Jewellery & Objects
BA Textile & Surface Design
Joint (Hons) Education Design or Fine Art
BA Graphic Design
BA Illustration
BA Moving Image Design
BA Interaction Design
BA Product Design
Applied Materials
Media
Painting
Print
Sculpture & Expanded Practice
MA Design for Body & Environment
MA Communication Design
MA Interaction Design
MSC Medical Device Design
Prof Dip Service Design
BA Visual Culture

The Annex

102–3 James’ Street
Directions

7–15 June

Fri 7 June 10am–8pm
Sat 8 June 10am–5pm
Sun 9 June 10am–5pm
Mon 10 June 10am–8pm
Tue 11 June 10am–8pm
Wed 12 June 10am–8pm
Thu 13 June 10am–8pm
Fri 14 June 10am–8pm
Sat 15 June 10am–5pm

Courses on show:

MFA in Fine Art
MFA Art in the Contemporary World

Grace Gifford House

John St W
Directions

7–15 June

Fri 7 June 10am–8pm
Sat 8 June 10am–5pm
Sun 9 June 10am–5pm
Mon 10 June 10am–8pm
Tue 11 June 10am–8pm
Wed 12 June 10am–8pm
Thu 13 June 10am–8pm
Fri 14 June 10am–8pm
Sat 15 June 10am–5pm

Courses on show:

Media

School of Education

Several years ago, I came across an essay written by Seamus Heaney titled 'Something to Write Home About' (1). In that essay, Heaney remembered how, while standing on the bridge that spanned the River Moyola at Castledawson in Northern Ireland, he would connect to the two different milieus that came together to form his particular way of being in the world. “On one side of me was the village of Castledawson,” he explained, “where my mother’s people lived in a terrace house, with a trellis of roses over the front pathway and a vegetable garden at the back”, while at the other side was “the parish of Bellaghy, or Ballyscullion, where [his] father’s side of the family, the Heaneys and the Scullions, had lived for generations” in “dwellings [that] were thatched rather than slated, their kitchens had open fires rather than polished stoves, the houses stood in the middle of the fields rather than in a terrace, and the people who lived in them listened to the cattle roaring rather than the horn blowing" (2). Two very different milieus then, with their own distinctive appearance and character, sounds and smells, rhythms and flows, histories and traditions, possibilities and limitations. And yet these two milieus made up his world.

Reflecting on the work and achievements of the 2023 School of Education graduating class, I remembered that piece of writing by Heaney. Our graduating students bridge two distinctive fields: art (including design) and education. Two fields that are different in many respects in what they do and achieve but also similar in their capacity to afford us opportunities to expand our worlds and to extend the established frameworks for thought and action that we tend to rely on when thinking and doing. And both art and education offer ways of perceiving the world that, in turn, promise to complicate easy understandings of it.

As artist-educators, our graduating students live comfortably in and between these two fields, travelling with them, between them, and across them. And as Hugh Kenner reminds us, “To travel is always, in some sense, to learn.” (3). To learn, indeed, is what these students are committed to doing as they ask educational questions of art and art-led questions of education. They engage with education as a medium for artmaking and artmaking as a medium for education. They put to work what they inherit from both fields without feeling bound by such an inheritance. Nor do they feel obliged, it seems, to remain faithful to what they inherit. To remain faithful to one’s inheritance is to be unfaithful to its capacities to function in and for a time yet to come. Comfortable with ambiguity, plurality, and change, our graduating students show us what is possible when one commits to a way of teaching, learning, and artmaking that is attentive, nuanced, promiscuous, curious, bold, place-based, and emergent.

We are very proud of our graduating class of 2023, and we congratulate them and wish them well in the pathways they will follow. We look forward to meeting them again and differently in the places where they will bring others into the company of art through education and into the experience of education through art. We have no doubt they will remain actively engaged in art and education, and we are confident that they will become leaders in their field as they advance and promote the value of art and design education locally, nationally, and globally. Working with these exceptional students over the past few years has been a great privilege for us all in the School of Education. For that opportunity, we are very grateful.

(1) Heaney, S. (2002), ‘Something to Write Home About’. In Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001. London: Faber and Faber.

(2) Heaney, S. (2002), Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001. London: Faber and Faber, p.52.

(3) Kenner, H. (2000), The Elsewhere Community. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, p.13.

Professor Dónal O’Donoghue
Head of School of Education