Donna Lawlor
she/her
The Fault: An Extinction of Experience
This body of work is a conversation between myself and nature, where my innermost thoughts, emotions, and experiences intertwine with the elements. Time is implicit throughout the works, bridging my discoveries and the larger narrative of erosion.
'The Fault' is a rock face eroded, forming a face of beauty, horror, and sadness, observing the sea. It represents a metaphor for human accountability in the climate crisis, questioning the consequences of erosion.
The perpetual, infinite movement of the sea shapes our coastlines through erosion. Observing this, I recall a quote by Collin Murray, as my practice is rooted in drawing:
“There is no such thing as 'Drawing' as an entity, no more than life. We must be willing to let more 'in', the known and the unknown, and let all the 'BITS CLASH AND BANG IN THE DANCE', so that the most poetic, personal, private moments can complete a passage into the public arena."
The Fault
Geological Fault, location Howth cliff trails
Earth Drawing
Landless
Moving Drawing
Copper Erosion