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The Naughton Gallery at Queen's, also known as The Naughton Gallery, is an art gallery and museum at Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland.Opened in 2001, the gallery is named after its benefactors, Martin and Carmel Naughton, who donated £500,000 to the university in 2002. [1]
Belfast Exposed houses a 20×7 m gallery for the exhibition of contemporary photography, digital archive browsing facilities, a spacious black and white photographic darkroom and a digital editing suite in its Donegall Street premises. [6] It was established "to challenge and subvert media representations of the Troubles-torn city". [5]
Its location average in Northern Ireland was £8,801, compared to £3,121 across the rest of the market. [37] In its seventh weekend, Belfast surpassed the £14.4 million gross of Schindler's List, to become the highest-grossing black-and-white film of the modern era. [38] The film ultimately grossed £15.6 million in the UK and Ireland. [39]
Cultúrlann McAdam Ó Fiaich (An Chultúrlann) is an Irish language cultural centre in The Gaeltacht Quarter and is located on the Falls Road, Belfast.Opened in 1991, the centre underwent renovation in 2010 and was opened the following year by then Irish President Mary McAleese.
The Linen Quarter is the area of Belfast city centre south of the City Hall.Traditionally the district was understood to occupy an approximate square shaped area bounded by Howard Street/Donegall Square South/May Street, Great Victoria Street, Ormeau Avenue and Joy Street.
In 1989, the centre was opened as the Old Museum Arts Centre. [5] The Old Museum is a Grade A listed building of the Belfast Natural History Society.Two decades later, the building needed a renovation and its limitations, such as the lack of accessibility for wheelchair users, prompted the OMAC to build anew.
The Strand Arts Centre. The Strand Arts Centre, also known as Strand Cinema is an independent four-screen cinema in Strandtown on Holywood Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland.It is one of the two remaining independent cinemas in Belfast, alongside the Queen's Film Theatre.
Victoria Square is a shopping complex located in Belfast, Northern Ireland.The area includes over 62 shops, 16 restaurants and an Odeon cinema. Opened on 6 March 2008, [1] Victoria Square is a commercial, residential and leisure development that took 6 years to build.