Skip to main content

Community Arts - Dublin Zine Fair, Ranelagh Arts Centre. Handmade Cards.

 Free Community Event
Here is an excerpt from a publication in The Irish Times re our  Zines Fair in August 2011, from an interview done with Sarah Bracken , our artistic director.


...."Zines are self-produced publications. Most often, they were made by hand and duplicated using a photocopier.
Print runs were short and the aesthetic was a DIY one: cut-and-paste typography, own photos, and a general disregard for publishing etiquette. Zines have been ubiquitous here since the 1970s, peaking in the late 1980s/early 1990s, but there is still a dedicated scene today.
This weekend the first annual Dublin Zine Fair, organised by Sarah Bracken, takes placeat the Ranelagh Arts Centre. “I have been going to the London Zine Symposium for the past few years and felt that we really needed one here,” says Bracken. “Having a fair in London has made the scene grow and has inspired so many people to make, or seek out, independently produced publications, so we hope that happens with the Dublin one.”
On Saturday, various zine-creators – from writers to illustrators, artists to graphic novelists – will gather to sell and exchange work.
One participant, Anto Dillon, is a zine afficionado who has has been involved in numerous publications over the past 15 years. Along with his brother Eugene, they created the popular Loserdom zine. First published in 1996, Anto Dillon was inspired by the sheer number of home-made publications around.
“I started reading zines in the early to mid-1990s. There was an active scene in Dublin and I was really curious, so I picked some up in Freebird and Comet [Dublin independent record shops] and was inspired.
“For us, it was about supporting local scenes, especially music, so we’d interview bands and write reviews.”
This interest led Anto to explore the global history of zines, culminating in a college thesis on their history in Ireland.
“There were fan fiction zines – where fans would write stories and collaborate with others by letter – going back to the 1950s, but the real starting point was the 1970s,” he says.
In March 1977, Stephen Rapid of Dublin band The Radiators from Space launched Raw Power, considered to be the first Irish fanzine. There were only two issues published, but the second carried the first-ever interview with The Undertones.
Bracken discovered zines in art college on a trip to New York, and was amazed not just at the volume that existed, but the diversity in style, execution and content. Along with Andrea Byrne, she set up Baby Beef Independent Press and starting publishing a zine that included poetry, stories and photos.
Like many, she graduated from traditional cut-and-paste fonts to more high-end work with binding that she sewed herself.
“While zines continue to survive globally, the internet has affected its culture. From blogging to Twitter, many now choose to forego the expense and hassle of production for an online platform.”
However, Anto Dillon says that blogs haven’t replaced zines, but that the decline is based on something else. “Content, and the means of distribution, has changed. Zines can’t compete with the immediacy of the internet, so they’ve had to become more visual. There has to be more of a reason for it to be on paper, which is why comics haven’t converted well to the internet. It’s a creative thing too, though – we have so many distractions these days that it’s hard to allocate the time to create something.”
Bracken is more optimistic about the connection between zines and the internet. “The internet is something we’re so used to, but handmade zines are special – you want to keep them, collect them. And the internet is an important platform to advertise that work.”
At the inaugural fair, there will be countless zines, comics and art for sale, and the day will end with a screening (with popcorn) of zine documentary $100 and a T-shirt.
Bracken believes the effort involved in making zines is to be respected and is here to stay. “I love how personal and unique they are, and making it yourself takes away the elitism.”


My contributions to the fair were not strictly zines, but they were handmade from papers.
I got some very interesting papers, both new and cut-offs from Daintree, a specialist paper shop in Camden Street , and set to making handmade cards for the "Zines" fair. Here are a few of them. I'm inserted info on the Zines fair , which was a huge success..the first of its kind in Dublin. 


































Popular posts from this blog

"Sense of Place" Art Exhibition in Tallaght University Hospital Dublin. June - September 2019.

Some weeks ago, I was honoured to be asked to prepare a hashtag body of artworks for hashtag exhibition by the family of the late Maeve Doyle. Maeve left a vast hashtag collection of hashtag paintings, hashtag drawings and hashtag poems, expressing a wish that her hashtag artworks be exhibited further afield. " Meeting of the Waters in Avoca". Watercolour. 30cms x 20cms Born in 1958 to a German refugee mother and an Irish father, Maeve was the youngest of their four children. Most of her life was spent living along the coastline of south Dublin, from which she derived much of her inspiration. She studied Fine Art Painting in IADT, known then in the 70’s as Eblana Avenue. She was a gentle and sensitive young woman, who was a true working artist expressing herself in a free and fluid manner through her several media. I was delighted to find the perfect hashtag art venue for her work in hashtag # tallaghtuniversityhospital , which is the National Cent

"Moynalty Community Outdoor Art Exhibition " EPIC Award nomination Ireland and British Isles.

Post- script: In 2013, Moynalty won the National Tidy Towns award. The following community arts project was mentioned on the adjudicators report, and we like to think that the community energy involved in this outdoor art exhibition contributed in some small way towards that award! http://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/moynalty-co-meath-named-ireland-s-tidiest-town-1.1521107 Left to right-  Helen Farrell, John O Brien, Heather Buchanan, Catherine Mc Cormack, Deirdre Gilsenan. Weighed down by the gloom of a long winter in 2012, our thoughts went to dreaming of longer days when leaf buds would form on trees, birds would start to look for materials with which to build their nests and a certain light would appear in our daylight hours. A notion formed of creating outdoor artpieces alongside  nature, as she created the following season. A brave or foolish notion ? I wasn't sure , but it didn't go away. It became stronger, and we began to consider

Outdoor Exhibition in MISA courtyard, St James Hospital Dublin. May - September 2017.

Mountpleasant Mural community project in MISA courtyard, St James Hospital Dublin. May - September 2017 . These paintings on view in the   Mercer’s Institute for Successful Ageing (MISA)    courtyard  in St. James's Hospital, Dublin 8 are from the  Mountpleasant Mural Project, a very successful community outdoor arts endeavor, which was one of the events of the Ranelagh Arts Festival 2013. Members of the public in Ranelagh were invited to add their brushstrokes and signatures, to these paintings, which celebrate local areas and events.  This project was one of many integrative community art events that took place in parks, in schools and on the streets in Ranelagh during the festival.  As an artist with a special interest in    bringing art into everyday communities, I was excited to be approached by Roisin Nevin,Creative Life Co-ordinator at MISA and asked to select and prepare a collection of artpieces for a show in the courtyard in MISA. These artpie