The cultural and ecological heritage of Ireland’s Atlantic islands is the theme of a new exhibition running next week in Galway.
Entitled Echoes of the Isles, the exhibition will run in Atlantic Technological University (ATU) Dublin Road campus library in Galway from August 18th as part of National Heritage Week.
Funded through the Heritage Stewardship Fund by The Heritage Council, it features new work by artists Róisín Doherty and John Flynn.
Róisín Doherty's Clocha Tite, 2025.
Both artists draw inspiration from the interwoven themes of landscape, folklore, archaeology, and memory. Their work brings attention to both the tangible and intangible aspects of island life—exploring how tradition, nature, and community interact in these unique environments, ATU says.
Róisín Doherty, originally from Cruit Island, Donegal, is a Galway-based artist whose multidisciplinary approach combines drawing, painting, sound, photography, and found objects.
A recent graduate of the MA in Creative Practice at ATU Galway, she has exhibited nationally and internationally, including at COP26 in Glasgow.
Her contribution to this project reflects on the fragile machair habitats and the erosion of traditional island life, offering a “poetic and immersive engagement with Ireland’s coastal ecology and cultural heritage”.
John Flynn, a visual artist from Cork, creates work that blends mythology, archaeology, and the natural world.
John Flynn - Inchagoill 12th C. Doorway, 2025.
Influenced by Ireland’s deep tradition of storytelling, Flynn offers new visual interpretations of ancient narratives, using his practice to bridge past and present in fresh and accessible ways.
The project is overseen by ATU’s Gary Dempsey, a digital heritage expert at the School of Design & Creative Arts and a member of ATU’s Heritage Research Group.
Inspired by the work of 19th-century antiquarian artists, whose field drawings accompanied archaeological exploration, Dempsey sees art as a powerful means of communicating heritage to the wider public.
“Echoes of the Isles is about reconnecting people with place,” says Dempsey. “It honours the knowledge embedded in island landscapes and shows how artistic practices can make that knowledge visible and shareable.”
The exhibition runs from August 18th to 22nd and admission is free.
More information here and/or contact Gary Dempsey, School of Design & Creative Arts, ATU Galway, [email protected]
For information about the ATU design and creative arts programmes, visit here

















































