Art in the Park V brought together nine artists across Swan Park in Buncrana, transforming the public space into an open-air gallery. The exhibition invited visitors to explore artworks that engaged with themes such as ecology and land use, migration, memory, belonging, walking as an artistic practice, colonial histories, and the creative reuse of everyday materials. These ideas came together under a shared theme, At the Threshold.
For this edition of Art in the Park, the history and landscape of the Inishowen peninsula provided a key source of inspiration. Located at the edge of the Atlantic, Inishowen had long been shaped by movement—of people, power, and ideas. Its coastal position made it strategically important, particularly in controlling access through Lough Swilly, with sites such as Fort Dunree and Ned’s Point reflecting this history.
At the time, although Inishowen was part of the Republic of Ireland, it remained closely connected to Derry, highlighting its identity as a border region shaped by overlapping political, cultural, and social influences.
The theme At the Threshold looked at Inishowen not just as a place, but as a condition. A threshold was a point of transition—a space where things met, changed, or were negotiated. It could be physical, like a border or coastline, but also social or personal: a moment of waiting, crossing, or transformation.
In this sense, Inishowen could be understood as a place shaped by questions of access, permission, and belonging. It was where public and private interests intersected, sometimes in tension, and where movement could be welcomed, delayed, or restricted.
Thinking about thresholds helped visitors reflect on how people moved through the world and how their experiences were shaped by larger forces—political, environmental, and social. Thresholds were moments when the familiar could feel uncertain, and when meanings began to shift.
They were also connected to the idea of being at the edge. At the edge, perspectives could change: what people saw and understood could feel unstable or unfamiliar. The horizon—always just out of reach—reminded visitors that their point of view was never fixed.
In those in-between spaces, reality and imagination could overlap. Thresholds heightened awareness, bringing attention to moments of change and possibility. They invited people to consider how they responded to uncertainty, and how new ways of thinking and being could emerge.
Ireland itself sat at the western edge of Europe, and Inishowen at the north-west edge of Ireland. This layered geography gave the peninsula a strong sense of being “in between”—between places, histories, and identities.
Within this context, the nine artists in Art in the Park 2026 explored the idea of the threshold from ecological, emotional, political, historical, and spatial perspectives. Their works approached the threshold as a liminal space—a zone of transition where meaning was open and evolving.
Each artwork could be experienced individually, but together they offered a wider reflection on how thresholds shaped both landscapes and lives. Through installations, photography, sound, and sculpture, the artists invited visitors to pause, reflect, cross, return, and see the park in new ways.
