CCA Derry ~ Londonderry
17 January – 14 March 2026
As I explored the group exhibition, ‘IT’S NOT CLEAR FROM HERE’ at CCA Derry ~ Londonderry, I experienced a peculiar sense of nostalgia. It stemmed from seeing old technologies that were familiar from my childhood and early adulthood – such as overhead projectors, TV monitors, and slide carousels – installed in the gallery space. This sensation is not surprising when we consider research on the phenomenon of ‘tech-nostalgia’, which involves a fondness or longing for outdated technology.
Curated by Ashleigh Wilson, ‘IT’S NOT CLEAR FROM HERE’ features Thomas Hunter, Sabi Nicholson and Lucy Tevlin, whose work is presented across all three gallery spaces at CCA. The exhibition taps into shared associations with outmoded devices, while the artists’ adaption of archival and found materials creates subjective, often autobiographical, narrative threads. Through lens-based media, they explore the precarity of images, which are shaped by time, technology and the act of looking. Each artist brings analogue technologies to our attention by reanimating them within the gallery setting, which begins to function more like a testing laboratory. Wall-based artworks and film projections share the space with installations of TV monitors on metal shelves. In many contemporary exhibitions, the mechanisms and means of display are often hidden away; however, here, these devices assume a sculptural dimension, becoming a visible and active component of the art.

Thomas Hunter presents a two-screen installation that combines his own footage with archival newsreel footage from the later years of The Troubles. The artist grew up in Belgium, so his experience of Ireland was largely mediated through family trips and news reportage of conflict. His projections feature idyllic imagery of rural landscapes in Sligo and Connemara, layered with news material from the North of Ireland. For example, a bright vista of Benbulben mountain is interrupted by the changing imagery of a press conference. A series of small monitors on shelves, positioned centrally in the gallery, features archival reference material, accompanied by a singular screen of flickering static, placed at a low level. Through our experience of the installation, we become active participants in distorted understandings of history and memory.
Sabi Nicholson’s dynamic installation addresses the ecological crisis at Lough Neagh. Nicholson’s projection is akin to a large-scale science experiment in which warped imagery (sourced from archival fishing documentaries) is projected onto the gallery wall through a suspended glass vessel, containing contaminated lough water. The visual and sound effects echo that of an ultrasound, with nature treated as a patient requiring urgent medical intervention. Lumen prints, made using local flora, are also shown.

Lucy Tevlin’s projected acetates feature works titled ‘The structure of a second’. These are texts which the artist writes after she has ordered 8mm film online, and while anticipating its arrival, to chart her sense of expectation. These are poetically charged staccato phrases and short sentences, designed to activate our visual awareness; they are numbered 1 to 24 to signify the standard of 24 frames within a filmed second. “Light falls over buildings in the distance/ Cascading/ Cascading/ Cascading/ An arrangement/ An expansion/ Cracks of white snow/ Dark clouds…” Alongside these text works, Tevlin presents the unopened rolls of film, which are exhibited as a finished artwork, and serve to perpetuate the mystique of the analogue process.
‘IT’S NOT CLEAR FROM HERE’ transforms the gallery into a space of shifting personal and collective narratives. Across photography and film, the presented works harness dislocated and elusive imagery to address shifting technologies and environmental crisis.
Dr Marianne O’Kane Boal is a critic and curator based in Donegal. She is President of AICA Ireland.