Méabh Breathnach: Bodies of Work (in progress)

Méabh Breathnach: Bodies of Work (in progress)

Hawthornvale Space

Preview Event: 7 November 2025, 5 – 7pm

Exhibition Runs: 8 November 2025 – 8 February 2026

Viewable daily, 7am – 9pm, from the street.

Méabh Breathnach uses ceramics, metal and the body as materials, tools, and sources of inspiration in the creation of both sculptural and functional objects. Their work often takes the form of installations that explore the objects and materials we surround ourselves with and the acts we habitually perform. They are interested in how we interact with and through these objects, the ways they cause us to think and to feel, and how they ultimately connect us to one another and to society as a whole. These immersive installations ofevocative andaffectiveobjects strive to engage the head,handsand heart in boththeir creation and consideration.   

In Bodies of Work (in progress) catch a glimpse into the artist’s studio as they work. A collection of brass tools Breathnach has been making will be visible in the space, used in the creation of new works in ceramics and added to over the period of the exhibition. These tools contain casts of, or impressions from, the artist’s and members of Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop’s community’s bodies. They’ve been inspired by the ways in which Breathnach engages with their own body,  tools and materials while making, as well as conversations and interactions they’ve had with others along the way. While each tool speaks to a specific instance of engagement or use, the series reflects upon communal spaces of creativity like ESW, where things are shared and constantly changing hands, and many bodies and minds are inextricably contributing to everyone’s experience and making process.

Méabh Breathnach

Breathnach (b. 1996, Ireland) graduated from the Sculpture and Environmental Art department at the Glasgow School of Art, in 2019, and a masters in Ceramics at Konstfack University of the Arts, Craft and Design in Stockholm, in 2025.They haveexhibitedin Glasgows Pollok House, House for an Art Lover and in the Royal Scottish Academys New Contemporariesexhibition.They have been awarded the Sir William Gillies Bequest (RSA), Creative Scotland’s Visual Artist and Craft Makers Award, andtheYoung Scot Nurturing Young Talent Fund.  

https://meabhbreathnach.ie/ 

Méabh Breathnach has been supported by the Hope Scott Trust for this project.

The Hawthornvale Mentorship Programme supports emerging visual artists who are beginning to establish their practice and require guidance to advance their careers.

The Programme is designed to foster the development of contemporary public art, reaching a wide audience and offering the public an unexpected encounter with thought-provoking artworks in a dynamic setting.

Hawthornvale Space is conceived as an ongoing programme of temporary public artworks, this programme reaches a broad audience, providing the members of the public with an unexpected encounter with contemporary art.

You can find out more about these programmes here