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9th ANNUAL
CROSSROADS IRISH-AMERICAN FESTIVAL
March 3rd - April 7th



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SATURDAY, MARCH 3rd

OPENING NIGHT


Benefit House Concert With Mick Moloney & Athena Tergis

You are cordially invited to the opening night of the Crossroads Irish-American Festival, an unforgettable night of Irish musical performance to benefit the Crossroads Irish-American Festival and the Irish Oral & Video History Archive of the San Francisco Bay Area. 

Crossroads is honored to host a rare house concert featuring the celebrated musician and historian, Mick Moloney, and internationally renowned fiddler, Athena Tergis as they bring to life the Irish tradition of storytelling through song. Hosted at a beautiful home in San Francisco, guests will be treated to breathtaking views, hors d'oeurves, and wines graciously offered from the host’s own wine cellar.

Mick Maloney and his Banjo
The proceeds from this special night of music will directly support the ongoing work of the Crossroads Irish-American Festival and the Crossroads Irish Oral & Video History Archive of the SF Bay Area. Please make the most generous contribution you can: Sponsors, $250; Patrons, $100; or Friends, $50.

Times:
Wine & hors d'oeuvres, 6:30 p.m.
Concert, 8:00 p.m.

Location: Home of Nancy Quinn & Tom Driscoll in San Francisco (address provided upon purchase of ticket).

Register for Crossroads Benefit House Concert with Mick Moloney & Athena Tergis  in San Francisco, CA  on Eventbrite

Sponsors, $250
Patrons, $100
Friends, $50

Space is limited.

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SUNDAY, MARCH 4th


If It Wasn't for the Irish and the Jews
The 9th Annual Crossroads Irish-American Festival is proud to present Mick Moloney, New York University Professor of Music and Irish Studies along with world-renowned fiddler, Athena Tergis, in an exploration of the historical intersection between Irish and Jewish musical traditions entitled, If It Wasn't for the Irish and the Jews.

Audiences will enjoy an illustrative presentation and musical performance documenting this collaboration from 1880 to 1920, a time when Vaudeville and Tin Pan Alley flourished with the fertile contributions of Irish and Jewish songwriters, theatrical producers, and music publishers.

Taking its title and inspiration from a catchy song composed in 1912 by William Jerome (real name: William Flannery) and Jean Schwartzis, this performance brings to life former Broadway luminaries such as George M. Cohan (Irish ancestral surname: Keohane), Eddie Foy (born: Edwin Fitzgerald), Norah Bayes (born Norah Goldberg), Tony Hart, Ed Harrigan, and Ada Jones. All of these musical figures populate Dr. Moloney's presentation about the nimble wit, socioeconomic observation, exuberant rhythms, melodic charm, and sentimental appeal pulsing through this under-appreciated chapter of American musical history.


Mick Moloney
Mick Moloney holds a Ph.D. in folklore and folklife from the University of Pennsylvania. He has taught ethnomusicology, folklore and Irish studies courses at the University of Pennsylvania, Georgetown, and Villanova Universities, and currently teaches at New York University in the Irish Studies program. 



Athena Tergis
Athena Tergis hails from San Francisco where she released her first album at age 16. Shortly after she moved to Ireland to follow her musical passions where she lived for over 3 years playing with groups such as the Sharon Shannon Band. In 2001 Athena joined up with Mick Moloney, John Doyle and Billy McComiskey in The Green Fields of America playing Traditional Irish tunes and songs at their best while exploring the music's journey to America Her most recent Album, A Letter Home, is an album that ranges across the intersections of Irish and Scottish music with an instrumental voice and style informed by the fiddler's American experiences.

Time: 4:00 p.m.

Location: Jewish Community Center of San Francisco, 3200 California Street, San Francisco

Tickets: $20, public / $18, JCCSF member – Tickets available online at jccsf.org/arts or by calling 415/292-1233 or at box office at JCCSF.

This event is made possible, in part, by a grant from Culture Ireland and is presented in association with Eugene & Elinor Friend Center for the Arts at the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco.

JCCSF


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MONDAYS, MARCH 5th, 12th, 19th - 8:00pm

Dramatic Readings

John Patrick Shanley's
Beggars In The House of Plenty

Crossroads partners with Off Broadway West Theatre Company to present a dramatic reading of Beggars in the House of Plenty, by Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright John Patrick Shanley.

With its 2nd offering in our play reading series, San Francisco's own Off Broadway West Theatre Company presents Beggars in the House of Plenty by John Patrick Shanley. "In his most autobiographical work to date, John Patrick Shanley takes on the demons and angels of the past that are never quite put to rest because they are family. Fast-paced, furious and unrelenting, this highly stylized play explores the myths and reality of an Irish-American family at war with itself.

'…crackles with the energy of artists who are going places…a theatrical event not likely to recur anytime soon…In a breathless 90 minutes, 40 topsy-turvy years of family life flood across the stage.'
—NY Times.

'…Painfully funny…a memory play that is like Eugene O'Neill as seen through the eyes of a Tennessee Williams influenced by Eugene Ionesco.'
—NY Post.

'…funny and profoundly painful at the same time…a play to be seen more than once.'
—Chelsea Journal.

Time: 8 p.m.,
Location: The Phoenix Theater, 414 Mason Street, San Francisco

Tickets: $10 available online www.offbroadwaywest.org or reservations via phone 415-407-3214

Off Broadway West Theater Company


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FRIDAY, MARCH 9th

On Patrick Graham: A Critical Exploration by Kenneth Baker of the San Francisco Chronicle

The Meridian Gallery is exhibiting the work of Patrick Graham, one of Ireland’s most important contemporary artists.

Kenneth Baker

Crossroads is pleased to partner with the Meridian Gallery to explore and celebrate this exhibit through a series of events at the gallery. Kenneth Baker, art critic for the San Francisco Chronicle, is our first guest in this series. Mr. Baker will lead an exploratory presentation about Patrick Graham’s art work, placing the artist both in a cultural and artistic context. A native of the Boston area, Mr. Baker has served as art critic for the Boston Phoenix and has contributed to numerous publications, including Artforum, Art in America and the New York Times Book Review. Mr. Baker has also authored Minimalism: Art of Circumstance (Abbeville Press, 1989/1997). 



Time: 7:00–9:00 p.m.
Location: Meridian Gallery, 535 Powell Street btw. Sutter & Bush, San Francisco

For information about parking, please click here.

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SATURDAY, MARCH 10th

The Crossroads Irish-American Festival gratefully acknowledges the generous underwriting sponsorship for events at the Main Public Library by
Ranger Pipelines, Inc. of San Francisco.

Ranger Pipelines



Children's Hour of Music & Song

Brothers Sean and Pat O’Donnell will entertain while playing lively tunes on fiddle and accordion.  Also, San Francisco’s own Celtic Voices Children’s Choir, a community outreach program of the Irish Immigration Pastoral Center (IIPC) will perform beautiful songs.

San Francisco’s Celtic Voices Children’s Choir


O'Donnell Bros

About Sean and Pat O’Donnell
Throughout their childhoods, Patrick and Seán O'Donnell had the opportunity to attend many house parties and céilithe with their parents who were both competent set dancers. These occasions provided a chance for the boys to hear traditional music played in the old style by Bay Area musicians who played with and learned from the great Galway accordionists Joe Cooley and Kevin Keegan.

Over the past 5 years, the O'Donnell brothers have performed at various events and venues such as the Fairfax Feis, the San Francisco St. Patrick's Day Parade, at the National Press Club in Washington D.C. and at numerous ceili dances and seisiuns. Both brothers have also won titles at the Midwest Fleadh Cheoil.

Time: 11:00 a.m.–12 noon.
Location:  San Francisco Public Library, Fisher Children's Center, 100 Larkin Street @ Grove, San Francisco


Irish-Americans in Popular Culture Roundtable

An engaging conversation about the enduring impact of Irish-Americans in popular culture featuring Joseph McBride, Associate Professor in the Cinema Department, San Francisco State University, Terry Golway, Professor of History, Kean University and Irish Echo columnist, and James Silas Rogers, director of Irish Studies at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota. This panel will be moderated by Bay Area poet, Jack Foley with performance by Jack & Adelle Foley.


Terry Golway

Terry Golway is the director of the Kean University Center for History, Politics, and Policy in Union, N.J. A former member of the New York Times Editorial Board and currently a columnist for the Irish Echo, he is the author of several books, including, For the Cause of Liberty, a History of Irish Nationalism; Irish Rebel, a biography of the Irish-American journalist John Devoy; The Irish in America, the companion book to the PBS series in 1997; Let Every Nation Know, a study of John F. Kennedy's speeches, co-written with Robert Dallek; and So Others Might Live, a history of the Fire Department of New York City


Joe McBrideJoe McBride Book

Joseph McBride is an internationally renowned film historian and biographer who has published fifteen books on film, including one appearing in February 2012 from Vintage Books, Writing in Pictures: Screenwriting Made (Mostly) Painless; it will also be published in March by Faber and Faber, London. McBride's other books include the acclaimed biographies Searching for John Ford, Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success, and Steven Spielberg: A Biography. The Spielberg book, first published in 1997, was updated by McBride for publication of a new edition last year by the University Press of Mississippi, which also published reprints of his Ford and Capra biographies. Searching for John Ford has been hailed as the "definitive" biography of the great Irish American director by both the New York Times and the Irish Times.


James Rodgers

James Silas Rogers is editor of After The Flood: Irish America 1945-1960, a volume of essays examining diverse aspects of the Irish-American community during the postwar years. He is also editor of New Hibernia Review: A Record of Irish Studies, and a past president of the American Conference for Irish Studies (ACIS). He is the author of articles on Irish-American history and literature in US Catholic Historian, Studies and New Perspectives on the Irish Diaspora), and the director of Irish Studies at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota.


Adelle and Jack Foley

Moderated by Jack Foley, with performance by Jack & Adelle Foley

Jack Foley
is an innovative, widely-published poet and critic who, with his wife, Adelle, performs his work frequently in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has published eleven books of poetry, seven books of criticism, and a book of translations of the French singer/songwriter, Georges Brassens; he has also edited All: A James Broughton Reader and The "Fallen Western Star" Wars, a collection of responses to an essay by Dana Gioia. Since 1988, Foley has hosted a poetry radio show on Berkeley station KPFA. His column, "Foley's Books," appears in the online magazine, The Alsop Review, and he is a Contributing Editor of Poetry Flash. Foley's recent, monumental Visions & Affiliations: A California Literary Time Line 1940-2005 has received international attention with reviews in both England (TLS, Beat Scene) and the USA. On June 5, 2010, Foley received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Berkeley Poetry Festival, and June 5, 2010 was proclaimed "Jack Foley Day" in Berkeley.


Time: 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m.
Location: San Francisco Public Library, Koret Auditorium, 100 Larkin Street @ Grove, San Francisco

A special thanks to the Friends of the San Francisco Public Library for their support of this event.


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SATURDAY NIGHT, MARCH 10th

Andrew Mac Namara Plays Accordion

Electrifying button accordionist, Andrew Mac Namara, playing his unique style of traditional Irish music.

Andrew Mac Namara

Andrew Mac Namara's individual style of playing traditional Irish music is both true to his heart and to the area in which he was reared. He was born in Tulla, Co. Clare, learning the strong traditions of East Clare music from older players such as Joe Bane and Bill Malley. In his late teens he joined the highly esteemed Tulla Ceili Band in which he toured both nationally and internationally for a number of years. He was a founding member of the group Skylark and recorded two albums with them before forming his own band called The Lahawns.

We gratefully acknowledge the support of Culture Ireland for this tour.

Time: 9:00 p.m.
Location:  The Plough & Stars Irish Pub, 116 Clement St. @ 2nd Avenue, SF
Tickets: $12/door or call 415/751-1122


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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14th

The History of the Irish Coffee at the Buena Vista Café

Irish Coffee at the Buena Vista Café

Crossroads 2012 partners with the California Historical Society to highlight a piece of San Francisco's own past in "The History of the Irish Coffee at the Buena Vista Café," a presentation by Elizabeth Creely. The California Historical Society will share its Buena Vista Café collection to reveal the story of Irish Coffee, a true Irish-American invention. The Buena Vista Café collection received by the California Historical Society in 1982 chiefly contains correspondence and clippings, plus a few photographs, documenting the introduction of Irish coffee to San Francisco. Original letters between Jack and Josephine Koeppler, proprietors, the Irish Consul in San Francisco, and various firms and whiskey distributors in Ireland, as well as correspondence from San Francisco Chronicle columnist, Stan Delaplane, begin in February 1954 and continues well into the 1970s with publicity and articles extolling the fame of Buena Vista’s famous Irish coffee.

Time: 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Location: California Historical Society, 678 Mission Street @ 3rd Street, SF
RSVP: to rsvp@calhist.org or 415.357.1848, ext. 229.


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THURSDAY, MARCH 15th

Writing Contest Award and Open Mic Reading

This event is co-sponsored by the MFA in Writing Program at the University of San Francisco.

Crossroads is proud to present the winner of the 2nd Annual Crossroads Irish-American Writing Contest in Short Story. The aim of this contest is to support and develop the voices of Irish-American writing.

This event celebrates the winner of the Short Story contest, Kathleen Donohoe, who will read the winning selection, “You Were Forever.”

The event also provides an "open mic" opportunity for writers in the community to read from their short story work which engages with the meaning of an Irish-American heritage. Open-mic readers will be limited to 5 minutes. We welcome all to join us, including those who submitted their work of short story to the contest. Please send us an email if you are planning to read from you work. it is not necessary to RSVP to secure a slot, however, please help plan the evening through this notification.

To find out more about the winner of the First Annual Crossroads Irish-American Writing Contest and information about future contests, please click here.

We offer a special thanks to our review panel, Catherine Brady, Academic Director of the Creative Writing Program at the University of San Francisco, Jean McGarry, Professor in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University, and Terry Winch, author of five books of poems and two story collections.



To learn more about these authors and their publications, please click here.


Time: 7:00–9:00 p.m.
Location: USF Main Campus, Fromm Hall, Maraschi Room

Fromm Hall is located on the USF Main Campus, on Parker Avenue, near the corner of Golden Gate Avenue.

To see a map of its location on the USF campus, click here:
http://www.usfca.edu/virtualtour/fromm/

Street parking is available on Parker Avenue and on other streets surrounding the perimeter of the campus.

For transit options to reach the USF campus, please visit:
http://www.usfca.edu/directions/transportation/



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THURSDAY, MARCH 22nd

Irish-American Poets: A Reading featuring Terry Ehret, Gerald Fleming and Laura Moriarty

Join us for an evening of exploring Irish-American poetry through the voices of three esteemed local poets. This is the second event in a series held at The Meridian Gallery by Crossroads in celebration of the art exhibit of Irish painter, Patrick Graham.


Terry Ehret

Terry Ehret is a poet and teacher, one of the founders of the innovative Sixteen Rivers Press, a hands-on publishing collective run by and for San Francisco Bay Area Poets. She has published four collections of poetry, most recently Night Sky Journey from Kelly's Cove Press. Literary awards include the National Poetry Series, California Book Award, Pablo Neruda Poetry Prize, Nomination for the Northern California Book Reviewer's Award, and five Pushcart Prize nominations. From 2004-2006, she served as the poet laureate of Sonoma County where she lives and teaches.


Gerald Fleming

Gerald Fleming's poetry and prose poems have appeared widely over the past thirty years. He has won numerous awards and fellowships, and between 1995 and 2000 he edited and published the literary magazineBarnabe Mountain Review, whose archives can be found at U.C. Berkeley's Bancroft Library. His book of poemsSwimmer Climbing onto Shore was published in 2005, and a book of prose poems, Night of Pure Breathing, appeared last spring from Hanging Loose Press in New York. He taught in the San Francisco public schools for thirty-seven years, and has published three books for teachers, the most recent of which is Rain, Steam, and Speed(Jossey-Bass/Wiley). He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. A new book of longer prose poems, The Choreographer, is due out in spring of 2013.


Laura Moriarty

Laura Moriarty's books include A Tonalist an essay poem from Nightboat Books, the novels, Cunning and UltravioletaA SemblanceSelected and New Poems, 1975 – 2007 came out from Omnidawn in 2007. Who That Divines is forthcoming from Nightboat Books. She is the author of ten other books of poetry going back to 1980.  She won the Poetry Center Book Award in 1983, a Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation Award in Poetry in 1992, a New Langton Arts Award in Literature 1998 and a Fund for Poetry grant in 2007. She has taught at Mills College and Naropa University, among other places, and is Deputy Director of Small Press Distribution. For more, see the blog A Tonalist Notes.

Time: 7:00–9:00 p.m.
Location: Meridian Gallery, 535 Powell Street btw. Sutter & Bush, SF

For information about parking, please click here.

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SUNDAY, MARCH 25th


Irish in the West: A Roundtable Conversation
This event is co-sponsored by the MFA in Writing Program at the University of San Francisco.


This event features David Emmons, Professor Emeritus of American History at the University of Montana, Matthew Jockers, Lecturer and Academic Technology Specialist, and James P. Walsh, Professor Emeritus of History at San José State University, in conversation with Margaret Mc Peake, Instructor of Interdisciplinary Studies and Writing at the University of San Francisco and Co-Producer of the 9th Annual Crossroads Irish-American Festival.

Dave Emmons Beyond the

Dave Emmons' principal area of teaching, research, and writing is the history of American immigration, particular that of Irish Catholics. In 1989, the University of Illinois Press published The Butte Irish: Class and Ethnicity in an American Mining Town which won both the Robert G. Athearn Prize of the Western Historical Association and Honorable Mention for the James Donnelly Prize given by the American Conference for Irish Studies. In 2010 Emmons published Beyond the American Pale: The Irish in the West which was also awarded an Honorable Mention runner-up prize by the ACIS. His current project, very tentatively titled Ireland in America: The Intersecting Lines of Irish and American History, 1845-1940, will deal with the various ways Ireland's and America's histories influenced one another. He lives with his wife Caroline Dollard Emmons in Missoula, Montana--120 miles northwest of Butte, along with San Francisco, one of Irish-America's two western capital cities.


Matthew Jockers

Matthew Jockers is a Lecturer and Academic Technology Specialist (ATS) in the Department of English at Stanford. His research and teaching is focused on Irish / Irish-American literature of the 19th and early 20th-century and on a computational approach to the study of literature that he calls "macroanalysis." Jockers has written extensively about Irish-American writers from the American West, and some of his recent publications include articles about Irish writers in Kansas, Montana, and California. Jockers's book, Macroanalysis: Digital Methods for Literary History is forthcoming from the University of Illinois Press. The book includes chapters discussing and analyzing Irish and Irish-American literature.


Jim Walsh

James P. Walsh is Emeritus Professor of History, San Jose State University, where he completed a 35 year career in teaching, scholarship, and academic administration.  Through those decades he enjoyed frequent teaching and research appointments to campuses of the National University of Ireland.  Dr. Walsh remains active in his field --United States History.

Time: 4:00–6:00 p.m., followed by reception
Location: USF Main Campus, McLaren Conference Center, Room 250

McLaren Conference Center is located on the USF Main Campus.  From the Main entrance to the campus on Golden Gate Avenue, McLaren Conference Center is found behind the University Center building and to the right of Phelan Hall.

To see a map of its location on the USF campus, click here, and look for “MC” on the map: http://www.usfca.edu/campusmap/

Street parking is available on Golden Gate Avenue, and on surrounding streets.

For transit options to reach the USF campus, please visit:
http://www.usfca.edu/directions/transportation/



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Thursday, March 29th

Longing for Elsewhere: My Irish Voyage Through Hunger, History and High Times, a reading with songs by Renée Gibbons

This is the third event in a series held at The Meridian Gallery by Crossroads in celebration of the art exhibit of Irish painter, Patrick Graham.

Renee Gibbons

Renee Gibbons was born in a Dublin tenement in the middle of the 20th century. At 17 she escaped to Paris with the help of a Hollywood actor and a kind stranger. Always restless and full of dreams she spent years searching for the meaning of life and what role she was meant to play in it. She has worked at 30 different kinds of jobs including model, courier, photographer, pre-school teacher and retail buyer and has spent time in more than 150 countries. While traversing the Panama Canal on a ship bound for Egypt with her year-old daughter Ashling, she met and fell in love with a radical longshoreman from San Francisco. For the next three decades that Bohemian city became the base for her world travels and her life as a writer, actor, singer and peace activist. A former columnist for the Irish Herald she lives in North Beach with her husband and cat. Her memoir 'Longing for Elsewhere' explores the themes entangled in her journey: identity, adventure, creativity, the burden of history and the passion for justice.



Time: 7:00 p.m.
Location: Meridian Gallery, 535 Powell Street btw. Sutter & Bush, SF

For information about parking, please click here.

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Saturday, March 31st

Oral Histories of the Irish in SF: An Afternoon of Storytelling

Join us as we once again honor and celebrate the voices and contributions of the 1950s generation of Irish immigrants to the San Francisco Bay Area. In this event, individuals from the Crossroads Irish Oral & Video History Archive Project of the San Francisco Bay Area will tell their stories, in their own words.



The Crossroads Irish-American Festival is creating the first-ever oral history archive of the Irish and Irish-American communities of the Bay Area. This oral history project is composed of audio and video recordings of individuals telling their own stories about their own experiences of emigrating to or growing up in the Bay Area.

If you or someone you know would like to be part of this archive, please contact us.



To learn more about the archive please click here.
Time: 2:00–4:00 p.m.
Location: United Irish Cultural Center, St. Francis Room, 2700 45th Avenue, SF


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Friday April 6th and Saturday, April 7th

Yours and Mine, a dance by Macklin Kowal, Dancer In Resi-dence at The Meridian

This is the fourth event in a series held at The Meridian Gallery by Crossroads in celebration of the art exhibit of Irish painter, Patrick Graham.

"Yours and Mine" an original dance performed by choreographer Macklin Kowal at the Meridian Gallery will be the closing events of the 9th Annual Crossroads Irish-American Festival.
Macklin, an Irish-American choreographer, will be the Dancer In Residence at the Meridian and will be performing a dance choreography inspired by Patrick Graham's work, specifically responding to Graham's depictions of the human form. Kowal's performance will be a study in embodied empathy. 


Macklin Kowal

Macklin Kowal (Choreographer) is a performer and performance maker currently based in Oakland. A San Francisco native, he is an alumnus of the city's School of the Arts, and San Francisco State University, as well as of l'Universite de Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint-Denis. His approach to making performance has been shaped by formative experiences under the direction of Marina Abramovic, Minna Harri, Ann Magnuson, Prumsodun Ok, and Tessa Wills. Active in San Francisco's contemporary dance/performance scene since 2009, Kowal's work has been presented by the Garage, the Home Theater Festival, Zero Performance's Too Much! A Queer Performance Marathon, the San Francisco Art Institute.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Meridian Gallery, 535 Powell Street btw. Sutter & Bush, SF Tickets: $10-$20 sliding scale at the door or online at Brown Paper Tickets
Click here to buy online tickets


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Ongoing in March

Visual Arts
Patrick Graham:
Thirty Years, The Silence Becomes The Painting
February 4-April 14, 2012


Crossroads is pleased to partner with the Meridian Gallery to explore and celebrate this exhibit, a survey of over 30 years of work. Curated by Peter Selz.
In a rare opportunity to view the works of Ireland's most influential contemporary artist, Meridian Gallery will display over 35 works by the artist Patrick Graham, including paintings, collages, and drawings. This exhibition contains four of his monumental iconic diptychs. Two of these pieces, Wreath and Somewhere Jerusalem, evoke the sense of ceremony, ritual, and a longing for space and homeland.

Patrick Graham


"Graham is widely considered Ireland’s major contemporary painter; Graham's paintings indeed have vistas that cannot be measured, his figures are fragmented, wounded humans, they are vulnerable, but promise endurance."


- Curator Peter Selz



Graham has always created meditations in the form of landscapes and iconic imagery that touch upon questions pertaining to reality, the meaning of life, and the search for faith in a world of diminishing absolutes.

Patrick Graham

The landscape has influenced my work right up to the present, particularly the low horizon; and that great vista where you can encounter space, and figures in it, in all kinds of ways….Silences. No conversations. A looking-in, rather than a lived experience. That 'looking-in on things' has stayed with me: a self-contained art."

- Patrick Graham

Interior Visions." Irish Arts Review





Gallery Events
March 9, 22, and 29 and April 6 & 7

The Crossroads Festival partners with the Meridian Gallery to co-present other artists whose work and themes resonate with those of the paintings by Patrick Graham. See details of these events listed above.

Location: Meridian Gallery, 535 Powell Street btw. Sutter & Bush, San Francisco

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All Festival Events are free to the public unless otherwise indicated.


For more information, please call (415) 810-3774
or email info@irishamericancrossroads.org



Click here to download aPDF file with the 2012 Calendar poster