Blue Sky Birds
Make model birds in this creative session, inspired by our 'The Enemy is Time' and 'Wild Ireland: Past, Present and Future' exhibitions
Learn More1950s to Now
During the 1950s and 1960s, artists experimented with new ways of making art in a world profoundly altered by the previously unimaginable losses and devastation of the Second World War. Two of the most important paintings in the Ulster Museum collection; Head II (1949) by Francis Bacon and Golden Age (1958) by Morris Louis respond in different ways to the uncertainties of the new Anthropocene era, an age dominated by the activities of man.
For many contemporary artists, the vulnerability of the natural world and the preciousness of human memory and experience have become dominant themes. Two new acquisitions Blue Sky Thinking (2019) by Patrick Goddard and Interval V (2023) by Ailbhe Ni Bhriain, reflect the alarming speed and immensity of loss associated with unchecked climate change. Read more about the artwork included in this exhibition here and here.
This exhibition is now open in our Spotlight Gallery. Free to visit and no booking needed.
Image Credits: Interval V © Ailbhe Ní Bhriain; Blue Sky Thinking courtesy of the artist and Seventeen, London.
Watch as Senior Curator of Art Anne Stewart in exploring the themes of climate emergency and the extinction and migration of species.
With the return of the Albert Bridge murmurations and the arrival of ring-necked parakeets to the Waterworks in North Belfast, we don't need to look far to see humanity's impact on the changing environment.
A temporary exhibition featuring over 50 paintings by renowned wildlife painter, Julian Friers
Now to 31st August 2025Patrick Goddard’s sculpture forms part of the Museum’s 'Blue Sky Thinking: New Art, New Themes, New Acquisitions' exhibition, addressing themes of migration, identity and the climate.
Past exhibition