Current On-site Exhibitions

15 Mar 2024 - 10 Apr 2024

A career retrospective by Bowie’s official photographer Denis O’Regan, an English photographer whose imagery is particularly associated with the punk movement, Queen, David Bowie, Duran Duran, and many more rock n roll luminaries. O'Regan has photographed everyone from AC/DC to ZZ Top, documenting Punk, New Romanticism, Grunge, and Heavy Metal along the way. He has travelled as official photographer to David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Queen and many more. His work has been widely published and exhibited and has photographed David Bowie more than any other photographer, covering over 200 concerts around the world.  

In 2021, O'Regan was appointed as the first ever Artist In Residence at London's Royal Albert Hall. The 2018 O’Regan’s 'Ricochet : David Bowie 1983' boxed set was a huge success both in hardback published by Penguin Random House; and as a limited edition boxed set containing five books, limited edition vinyl and fine art prints, published...

11 Mar 2024 - 19 Apr 2024

We are delighted once again to have the annual awards exhibition of the Press Photographers’ Association of Ireland (PPAI) on display in dlr LexIcon. Congratulations to Alan Betson of The Irish Times who is the AIB Press Photographer of the year 2024! 

Now in its 46th year the PPAI, AIB Press Photographer of the Year Award, celebrates the very best of Irish press photography. The exhibition features over 100 winning and highly-commended photographs covering Irish life, at home and abroad, during 2023 and highlights the dedication and skill of Ireland’s top press photographers. 

*Exhibition now extended until Fri 19 April 2024!

04 Apr 2024 - 30 Apr 2024

Indian-born designer, visual artist and author, Shabnam Vasisht sees colour as her cultural inheritance and expresses emotion through it. Sustainability is an important factor in Vasisht’s art practice. A retired dress-designer living in Ireland for over 45 years, she often uses the medium of her trade to create two-dimensional images and soft sculptures. This manipulation of waste textiles also extends to other throwaway products, combining diverse textures and colours by layering, intertwining or juxta positioning into a composite mixed-media whole.