
CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
Pictured here one of the young artist Daniella Egwin.
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh

CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
Pictured here two of the young artists involved Esther Airbasoye and Daniella Egwin.
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh

CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
Dance Performance
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh

CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh


CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh

CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh

CMK 10072020
REPRO FREE NO FEE
Cork Migrant Centre unveil Black Lives Matter Artwork
Nano Nagle Place (NNP), Cork Migrant Centre (CMC), and Cork Printmakers unveil a significant Black Lives Matter artwork on the NNP Entrance Plaza on Douglas Street, Cork city Centre.
The launch of this artwork comes after the CMC Youth Against Racism webinar where a number of young people, and their mentors, engaged frontline services providers in a conversation on positive change for multicultural Ireland. Already the group has received proactive communication from a number of significant bodies, including the Ombudsman for Children, who delivered his own report on Direct Provision this week. This particular artwork became a way for the young people to express their feelings, in their own words, following recent events in America after the killing of George Floyd, and as part of the #BlackLivesMatter global movement. Here in Ireland, many young people, not just those from refugee and migrant backgrounds, feel a sense of isolation at times in a country where racial abuse and institutional discrimination is not being tackled effectively.
Picture Clare Keogh
