Live Aid 2026 Spring Programme
This spring, the National Library of Ireland continues celebrating Live Aid with a new season of vibrant events.
This spring, the National Library of Ireland continues celebrating Live Aid with a new season of vibrant events.
This winter, the National Library of Ireland marks the 40th anniversary of Live Aid, the global concerts that united 1.6 billion viewers in July 1985.
Our new exhibition at the National Photographic Archive, Temple Bar, showcases striking photographs from the Band Aid Trust Archive. It offers a rare chance to revisit the atmosphere, scale and impact of this extraordinary cultural moment.
It is a chance to see the photographic record of the artists who took part in the ‘Global Jukebox’ and view a specially commissioned short film using more of the NLI stills to capture the incredible experience shared on one day by 1.6 billion people viewing it across the world. Four decades on from the legendary 1985 concerts in London and Philadelphia to the smaller ones in Australia, Japan and the Netherlands, recapture the creativity, community and spirit of the original concerts.
Saturday 15 November, 2-4 p.m. | National Photographic Archive, Meeting House Square, Temple Bar
Free. Drop-in (arrive early if you want to be guaranteed a coffee).
Saturday, 22 November, 1.30–4.00 p.m. | National Library of Ireland Main Building, Kildare Street
Free. Booking essential.
Thursday, 27 November, 6.30–8.30 p.m. | National Photographic Archive, Meeting House Square, Temple Bar
Free. Registration essential.
► Seanchoíche: Storytelling Night
Thursday, 4 December, 6.30–10.00 p.m. | National Photographic Archive, Meeting House Square, Temple Bar
Tickets for this event have booked out - wait list only
► Lunchtime Curator’s Tours | Live Aid Exhibition
1-2p.m., Tues. 25 Nov., Tues. 2 Dec., and Tues. 9 Dec. | National Photographic Archive, Meeting House Square, Temple Bar
Free. Booking essential.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at learning@nli.ie.
In this exhibition, more than seventy photographs and images have been carefully curated from the Band Aid Trust Archive, generously donated to the National Library of Ireland (NLI) in 2017.
Through a series of striking displays, the exhibition brings audiences on a visual journey of the Live Aid concerts, capturing the behind-the-scenes preparations, atmosphere and iconic performances by bands and artists on both sides of the Atlantic as the day unfolded.
From Status Quo, U2 and David Bowie in London, to Black Sabbath and Run DMC in Philadelphia Live Aid at the National Library of Ireland immerses visitors in the scale and spirit of this iconic event from the intimacy of the National Photographic Archive.
This free exhibition opens to the public daily (10.00am – 4.00pm)
Read more about our Spring Programme of events here
Experience a virtual tour with audio highlights of NLI's award-winning exhibition on William Butler Yeats (1865-1939), one of the great writers of the 20th century and a significant influence on modern Irish cultural identity.
The exhibition draws on items from the National Library of Ireland’s Yeats Collection, the largest collections of books, manuscripts and personal items relating to WB Yeats in the world.
Explore Yeats’ many interests – Ireland, literature, folklore, theatre, politics, mysticism and the occult. Exhibition highlights include manuscripts of many of Yeats’ most beloved poems including “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” and “Easter, 1916”, his Nobel Prize medal, personal artefacts from Yeats’ school reports to a cherished carved piece of lapis lazuli, remarkable photographs of Yeats and his family and friends, and much more.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at exhibitions@nli.ie
G.P.O. and O'Connell Street following the Easter Rising, Keogh Photographic Collection, May 1916 (Ke 121)
In this online exhibition, the National Library of Ireland’s rich and varied collections reveal the historical background, and key people and places, of the 1916 Rising.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at exhibitions@nli.ie
Helen Hooker O'Malley © Helen Hooker O'Malley Roelofs Sculpture Trust, University of Limerick
In this online exhibition, discover Helen Hooker O'Malley's love for the landscape, history, and people of Ireland, and why she said “Ireland gave me the greatest outlet towards creative heaven".
Helen Hooker O'Malley gifted over 1,200 of her photographic works to the National Library of Ireland in 1992, the year before her death. Almost all of these works date from the 1970s.
An American by birth, Ireland became Helen’s home following her marriage in 1935 to the Irish writer and revolutionary, Ernie O’Malley. Though their marriage ended in 1952, her love for Ireland remained constant throughout her life.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at exhibitions@nli.ie
Through decades of gay activism, Christopher Robson took thousands of photographs. In 2015, in accordance with Christopher’s wishes, his partner Bill Foley generously donated 2,000 photographs to the National Library of Ireland, dating from 1992-2007, many recording Dublin Pride marches.
These ensure LGBT+ representation in Ireland’s story. In this exhibition, we celebrate those photographs, and we celebrate Christopher Robson, an extraordinary man who lived with Pride.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at exhibitions@nli.ie
People at the junction of Nassau Street, Grafton Street and Suffolk Street, Dublin, c. 1904 (CLAR26)
The photographs of JJ Clarke provide a glimpse of James Joyce’s Dublin.
Clarke, a medical doctor from Co. Monaghan, took the images while he was a student in Dublin between 1897 and 1904. His approach is remarkable as an early example of a modern photojournalistic style, focused on the people of Dublin rather than the city’s architecture.
This exhibition reveals his vivid record of Dubliners at the turn of the twentieth century.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at learning@nli.ie
Dublin City Centre after the 1916 Rising (PD C55)
Explore the geography of the 1916 Rising through the collections of the National Library of Ireland.
Dublin was the focal point of the activity in the Easter 1916 rebellion against British rule in Ireland, but counties Galway, Meath and Wexford also experienced pockets of fierce fighting. Maps, photographs, prints, and manuscripts reveal the stories of the people and places involved in the Rising across Ireland.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at exhibitions@nli.ie
Poblacht na hÉireann - Proclamation of the Irish Republic (EPH G102)
The 1916 Rising marked a turning point in Irish history. In this online exhibition, find out more about the men who signed the Proclamation through photographs, letters, and ephemera.
On Easter Monday 1916, at a time when Ireland was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, seven Irishmen proclaimed the establishment of the Irish Republic, nominating themselves as its provisional government. Together with 1,600 poorly armed followers, they occupied prominent buildings in Dublin. Discover what happened next and the impact it would have on the Irish revolution.
If our team can be of any assistance, please contact us at learning@nli.ie