Dead, Dissected, And Buried

These are the UDA boards on Avenue Road, near Lurgan Park, which proved controversial when they were erected (in 2016), mainly because the second piece (below) “celebrat[es] 30 years of South Belfast/Lurgan 1 company D battalion” UDA and shows Troubles-era shows-of-strength (News Letter) and because it turned out the wall was owned by the Housing Executive (NIWorld).

The piece above describes the creation of the UDU in 1893, as a response to the second Home Rule bill, which was passed by the Commons but rejected in the Lords, and which Edward Saunderson celebrated by saying, “Home Rule is dead. It was dissected in the House of Commons, buried in the House of Lords, and even the Irish people would not trouble to give it a wake”. The UDU is as used an origin-story for the UDA, though often in vague terms, such as the verbiage here which reads “[the UDU] would become the birth stone of the Ulster Defence Association, as we looked to the patriotism of our forefathers to defend our communities”. (For more, see UDU-UFF-UDA. For Saunderson, see Union Is Strength.)

This year (2024), UVF lettering a stone’s throw away, on the other side of the entrance to the park, likewise drew criticism (BelTel | ArmaghI), but it has now been removed.

Avenue Road, Lurgan.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05406 T05405 T05407 T05408 John McMichael Andy Tyrie

We Exist! We Resist! We Rise!

“Solidarity”, “تكافل” (in Arabic) between (Irish) republican prisoners and Palestinians in Israeli jails. Al Jazeera reports that roughly, 9,500 Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank are currently being held, and about 3,600 without charge, under “administrative detention”. Springfield Park, west Belfast.

Below: “Support republican political prisoners” in “Maghaberry – Portlaoise – Hydebank”. IRPWA (web) board in Ardoyne Avenue, north Belfast. See also: the same message on Divis Street, west Belfast.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05291 [T05292] T05387

The Bone Stands With Palestine

“Stop the war on Gaza! Pray for peace!” There are doves in the upper corners but the central imagery is of a clenched fist and the background shows a republican volunteer (perhaps from the INLA) comforting a Palestinian.

For the mural that this framed image has been added to, see Clós Ard An Lao.

Clós Ard An Lao/Ardilea Close, in the Bone, north Belfast

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05388

Dialogue

– “Why do they come here, if they can’t speak our language?”
– “We will learn your language! Will you learn to accept us?”

Despite learning the language and opening businesses, immigrants came under attack in early August as part of a wave of anti-immigrant rioting and attacks in a number of UK cities, including Belfast, Bangor, Carrick, Newtownabbey, and Ballyclare. Shops were attacked on Botanic Road and Sandy Row (BBC | RTÉ) and eggs were thrown at a Middle Eastern market on the Falls Road (BBC). In response, anti-racism demonstrators outnumbered an anti-immigration protest five to one (Irish Times | BBC); residents of the middle Falls came out a few days later (Belfast Live).

This anti-racism mural is on Albert Street, Divis, west Belfast. In-progress image (above) from June 23rd; image of completed mural (with additions by kids) below from August 11th

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T04866 [T04867] T05359

African Blood

Sugarhouse Entry, running between Waring Street and High Street, and home to the Muddlers’ Club of the United Irishmen, was closed in 1972 as part of the “ring of steel” securing Belfast city centre (DC Tours) and for fifty years served only as a back alley to various businesses between Waring Street and High Street; there was talk in 2022 of reopening it (Irish News) and again in 2023 (BelTel). It has now (August, 2024) been refurbished and reopened (BelTel | UTv includes interview with Sean Napier | Belfast City Council video on youtube).

Peter Strain (web) produced illustrations for a number of entries in 2020 and 2022, including one from 2022 for Sugarhouse Entry. It quotes United Irishman Thomas Russell as saying, “Every time I look at a lump of sugar, I see a drop of African blood”.

The precise source of the quote is unknown (please comment/get in touch if you know it); towards the end of Russell’s 1796 Letter To The People Of Ireland, in which he exhorts Irish people to develop a national spirit and take an interest in politics, he takes as a present-day example refraining from supporting the Crown in the French Revolutionary Wars by serving in the army or by buying taxed goods (such as sugar): “Are the Irish nation aware that this contest involves the question of the slave trade, the one now of the greatest consequence on the face of the earth? Are they willing to employ their treasure and their blood in support of that system, because England has 70 or 7000 millions engaged in it, the only argument that can be adduced in its favour, monstrous as it may appear? Do they know that that horrid traffic spreads its influence over the globe; that it creates and perpetuates barbarism and misery, and prevents the spreading of civilization and religion, in which we profess to believe? Do they know that by it thousands and hundreds of thousands of these miserable Africans are dragged from their innocent families … transported to various places, and there treated with such a system of cruelty, torment, wickedness and infamy, that it is impossible for language adequately to express its horror and guilt, and which would appear rather to be the work of wicked demons than of men. If this trade is wrong, is it right for the Irish nation to endeavour to continue it? And does not every man who contributes to the war contribute to its support?” (archive.org p. 22)

(Other pieces by Strain in the entries can be seen in Handsome, Easy-Going, And Utterly Untrustworthy | The Blots On The Page Are So Black | As You Lived You Must Die | Trust Women.)

See also: the Visual History page on the Belfast Entries Project.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05534 T05355 T05357 T05356

Ársa Ach Ór

The Power’s whiskey (web) slogan “Old but gold” has here been translated into Irish as “ársa ach ór” and the red diamond from the ‘gold label’ is now agitating for “An Dream Dhearg [web] – #AchtAnoıs #CeartaTeanga” [The Red Group – #BillNow #LanguageRights].

There is also (below) a new tribute to Rónán Mac Aodha Bhuí, similar to the one at An Chultúrlann – for which, see Dorn San Aer.

At Tí Mhadáın/Madden’s Bar in Berry Street, Belfast city centre, replacing the Paddy mural.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05352 [T05353] T05354 three swallows

Tunnel Vision

Here is a gallery of the street art and wild-style writing painted in the tunnel at the redeveloped York Street Station (BBC), formerly Yorkgate Halt. Get in touch if you can supply any of the missing artists in the list below …

NOYS (ig)
KONE (ig)
JAM2 (ig)
Karl Fenz (ig)
SNAK (ig)
Kyle McGinley (ig)

WEB1 (ig)
emic (ig)
?emic?
NOKA (ig)
Friz (ig)
?BORE?
KVLR (ig)

Doodles by passers-by (with help from Anie Poole (ig))
Strangford (ig)
Lost Lines (ig)
?train
Cha Cha (ig)

Other side …

Outside Hoarding

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05367 T05368 T05369 T05370 T05342 T05371 T05372 T05373 T05374 T05375
T05376 T05377 T05378 T05379 T05380 T05381 T05382 T05383 T05384 T05385 T05332 T05386
T05346 T05362 T05349 T05363 T05350 T05364 T05351 T05365 T05366
[T05333] [T05334] [T05335] [T05336] [T05337] [T05338] [T05339] [T05340] [T05341] [T05343] [T05344] [T05345]

A Bird In The Hand

These bird-boxes and platforms were installed by Wild Belfast (web) – a group aimed at enhancing natural habitats – in order to attract house-martins, who visit Ireland in the summer in order to breed, but whose numbers are in decline because of a loss of nesting sites (under the eaves of houses) and building materials (mud).

The boxes are in front of street art by artist Daniela Balmaverde (web) on the end of one of the stands at Cliftonville FC (BBC) – the shamrock earrings are the club’s emblem.

July 30th

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05327 [T05328] T05329 T05330 T05331
T05089 [T05090] [T05091] T05092 [T05093]

Kneecap’s Fine Art

Kneecap’s new album Fine Art was released on June 14th on Heavenly Recordings. (The cover of the new album is included in the recent update to the mural on Madden’s bar – see Sásta A Bheıth Anseo.)

Their film, also called Kneecap, had its Belfast premiere in the Kennedy Centre, west Belfast, on Tuesday and has been on general release since Thursday (RTÉ | BBC).

The band yesterday (Friday August 9th) launched a third mural in Hawthorn Street/Sráıd Na Sceıthe, (joining Incendiary Device and England Get Out Of Ireland,) which blows up the sticker seen on the street-sign (below; and previously in Land Grab) into a mural: Saoırse don Phalaıstín [Freedom for Palestine]. The launch was moved to an earlier time (2:30 p.m.) so that it would not conflict with the anti-racism rally in the city centre (BelTel).

The mural had previously been a sticker (see the street sign, above) and flyer – this one is from Waterford Street, in April

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05289 T05302 T05306 T05305 T05311 T05314 T05299 T05303 T05300 T05290 T05288 T05317 T05318 T05322
T04458
Naoıse Ó Caırealláın Móglaí Bap Lıam Óg Ó Hannaıdh Mo Chara JJ Ó Dochartaıgh DJ Próvaí

Garden Of Hope

The new “Garden Of Hope” in Springmadden is also a memorial garden, with a (second) plaque to four of the victims of the “Ballymurphy Massacre” who were shot near the spot, which was across the street from the old Henry Taggart base. (For the first plaque, see this 2010 entry in the Peter Moloney Collection.) Also in Springmadden is the Reaching Out mental-health art.

Springfield Road, west Belfast

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2024 Paddy Duffy
T05294 [T05293] T05295c
T05296 T05297 “planted 8 June 2024”, “Wee Rita’s flower bed”