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  • Ireland: Art work on display at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1905.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: View of an interior wall at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1848.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_003.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_008.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_002.jpg
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo033.JPG
  • Screengrab of "Mismatch Skills in Ireland" published in The New York Times
    INYT_IrelandSkills_03.jpg
  • Ireland: Detailed view of a brick made of shredded money at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley...Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1972.jpg
  • Ireland: General view of the only bedroom at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1941.jpg
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley seating on a sofa in one of the rooms at his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1932.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A painting hangs from a wall at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1869.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: General view of the kitchen area at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1865.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A fifty euro bill toilet paper is seen hanging in a wall at the toilet area of the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1862.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_024.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_014.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_009.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9453.jpg
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo030.JPG
  • Tearsheet of front page of "Ireland razes ghosts of the housing crash" published in the International New York Times
    INYT_Ireland_GhostEstates_FrontPage_...jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A newspaper clipping on display at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1981.jpg
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley explains to a young visitor, how he made the bricks of shredded money used in the cosntruction of his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1966.jpg
  • Ireland: A painting is displayed on a wall at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1902.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A satirical gravestone is seen at the entrance of the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1882.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A satirical gravestone is seen at the entrance of the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1876.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A guitar covered with shredded money stands among other objects in the main hall of the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1868.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: Paintings hanging in a wall at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1840.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_026.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_020.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_006.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9452.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9443.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9420.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9419.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9411.jpg
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo050.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo047.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo027.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo025.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo019.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo005.JPG
  • Screengrab of "Irish Tech Industry" published in The New York Times
    NYT_IrelandTech_01.jpg
  • Screengrab of "Irish Tech Industry" published in The New York Times
    NYT_IrelandTech_02.jpg
  • Tearsheet of "Lack of skills thwarts jobless in Europe" published in the International New York Times
    INYT_IrelandSkills_01.jpg
  • Screengrab of "Mismatch Skills in Ireland" published in The New York Times
    NYT_Irish_Skills_01.jpg
  • Tearsheet of front page of "Ireland razes ghosts of the housing crash" published in the International New York Times
    INYT_Ireland_GhostEstates_FrontPage_...jpg
  • Tearsheet of "Ireland razes ghosts of the housing crash" published in the International New York Times
    INYT_Ireland_GhostEstates_02.jpg
  • Tearsheet of "Recovery leaving many Irish scraping by" published in the International New York Times
    INYT_Ireland_BailoutEnds_01.jpg
  • Screengrab of "Billion Euro House art by Irish artist Frank Buckley" published in TIME LightBox
    Billion Euro House LightBox.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: General view of the Glass House Building, where the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley, is set up...Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1994.jpg
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley at the kitchen in his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1963.jpg
  • Ireland: General view of the only bedroom at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1948.jpg
  • Ireland: View of the only bedroom at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1947.jpg
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley seating on a sofa in one of the rooms at his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1936.jpg
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley seating on a sofa in one of the rooms at his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1934.jpg
  • Ireland: General view of the entrance hall at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1904.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A bicycle covered with shredded money is on display at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1900.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A wall clock made of shredded money is displayed at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1898.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A suitcase full of shredded money on display at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1884.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: A painting of Marilyne Monroe is seen in the wall of a room at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1859.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: PView of the toilet area at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1854.jpg
  • Tearsheet (Feature story) of "Ireland: Emigracao dispara com a crise" published in Expresso
    Screen shot 2011-04-19 at 23.05.19.jpg
  • Tearsheet of "Irlanda: Uma ilha de sucesso que se afunda na crise" published in Expresso
    tearsheet expresso.jpg
  • Screenshot of Irish Crisis images
    Screen shot 2010-12-06 at 23.54.20.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_030.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_029.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_028.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_022.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_019.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_010.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_004.jpg
  • Anti-governament demonstration in Dublin, 29/09/2010.
    Jobs Not Cuts_001.jpg
  • "Ghost Towns" in Inside Housing Magazine
    Ghost towns_002.jpg
  • "Ghost Towns" in Inside Housing Magazine
    Ghost towns_001.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9489.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
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  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
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  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
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  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
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  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9468.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9465.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9460.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9447.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9439.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9431.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9429.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9428.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9418.jpg
  • Work unions demonstration outside the Dail in Dublin during the presentation of 2010 Budget for Ireland
    DSC_9416.jpg
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo049.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo037.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo035.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo029.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo024.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo022.JPG
  • Up to 120,000 people have marched in Dublin in protest at how the Government is handling the economic crisis. The march, which was organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU), took nearly one and a half hours to make its way from Parnell Square to Merrion Square. 21/02/2009.
    dubli_demo016.JPG
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley passes by in his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
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  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley jumps to a bed in the only bedroom at his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1952.jpg
  • Ireland: Irish artist Frank Buckley stands beside the main entrance of his Billion Euro House art installation in central Dublin. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1926.jpg
  • March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: March 27, 2012 - Dublin, Ireland: View of the toilet area at the Billion Euro House art installation by the Irish artist Frank Buckley. ..Worthless euros, taken out of circulation and shredded by Irelands Central Bank, formes the interior walls of an apartment that Mr. Buckley does not own in a building left vacant by the countrys economic ruin...The artist decided to call the apartment  built from thousands of bricks of shredded, decommissioned cash (each brick contains, roughly, what used to be 50,000 euros)  the Billion Euro House. He reckons that about 1.4 billion euros actually went into it, but the joke, of course, is that it is worth simultaneously so much and so little...A large gravestone beside the main door, announces that Irish sovereignty died in 2010, the year that the government accepted an international bailout so larded with onerous conditions that the Irish will be paying for it for years to come. (Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Polaris)
    DSC_1851.jpg
  • Screenshot of Irish Crisis images
    Screen shot 2010-11-30 at 23.28.18.jpg
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Paulo Nunes dos Santos

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