EOGHAN RYAN REPORTS ON HIS PARTICIPATION IN THE DWELL HERE RESIDENCY AT IMMA LAST YEAR.
Thinking back on my time at IMMA, as part of the year-long Dwell Here programme, I returned to a quote that I had included at the end of my original application:
“For us it’s not about possessing the territory. Rather, it’s a matter of increasing the density of communes, of circulation, and of solidarities so that the territory becomes unreadable, opaque to all authority. We don’t want to occupy the territory, we want to be the territory.”1

What that quote proposed in 2011, utopian and gigantic in its conceit, feels much more specific in retrospect. I applied for the Dwell Here residency with a fairly direct intention: to consolidate a body of research and work that considers Ireland’s immediate ‘state’. At the time, I was attempting to do this remotely from Brussels, largely unsuccessfully. The residency at IMMA offered a different set of conditions entirely, not just time and space, but contextualised proximity through a sustained period of living and working, alongside the additional support of critical frameworks, an international community, finances, and a large art institution that, as an Irish millennial artist, I have grown up alongside.
For my practice, living and working within an institution, and the co-dependencies such a position invites, produces both constructive friction and access. The museum becomes not just a site of presentation, but a shell to live in, think through, and spill out from. The IMMA shell also comes with Victorian gardens and 24-hour on-site security.

The residency programme is organised and curated by Janice Hough, who carefully balances the facilitation of critical inquiry with the social and domestic aspects of care that make a year-long residency not just functional, but liveable. The critical inquiry aspect is focused around ‘intensives’. These take the form of curated weeks of workshops, field trips, and practice sharing, bringing together artists from the month-long residencies alongside year-long, live-in and studio residents, as well as invited practitioners.
These intensives are loosely framed around thematic strands relating to Technologies of Peace, The Museum as a Site of Vibration, and The Irish Paradigm, which, in practice, function more as points of departure than fixed frameworks. Outside of the intensives, my focus during the residency was directed toward developing Carceral Jigs (2025), a video installation commissioned by EVA International, and adapting my performance work, Circle A (2024), for the IMMA courtyard.
The production and adaptation of these works, interspersed with the intensives and punctuated by continuous exchange across shared meals, studio visits, pints, walks, and so on, meant conversations unfolded without pressure toward resolution or outcome. It created a rhythm between studio work and collective reflection, both organised and incidental, that retained a particular ambience, a willingness to engage with other practices, to test ideas discursively, and to sit with positions one might not necessarily agree with. I think I was starved of exactly this; thinking together from very different priorities, proximities and formalisms toward common concerns, and having the time to do it properly.

The Circle A performance I developed for the courtyard (with help from Sara Grimes, Boris Charrion, Tomislav Fellner, and Amina Szecsödy) evolved from the strangely fitting particularities of the site – an open quadrangle with a circle in the middle. Although it was independently curated from the residency, its adaptation benefitted greatly from my close proximity, as I was able to look down on it from the staff corridor, whilst picking up my post.
Now that my residency has ended, the rarity of what Dwell Here made possible
lands hard in a city entrenched in crisis. Dwell Here offers a generous space, however temporary, in which individual practice and collective thinking can unfold alongside one another, each sustaining the other across a genuinely non-homogeneous international set of practices, all in dialogue with the institution.
Dwell Here is an exceptionally well-considered residency programme. It provides a rare set of conditions for artists to live, work, and think alongside one another in the city – conditions that still feel, to a degree, open, provisional, and actively shaped by those participating within them. I would strongly encourage others to apply while it continues to exist.
Eoghan Ryan is an Irish artist based between Brussels and Dublin working across moving image, installation, and performance.
eoghanryan.ie
1 The Invisible Committee, The Coming Insurrection (California: Semiotext(e), 2011) p108.