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MEET OUR TEAM!

OUR BOARD OF TRUSTEES:

Damien Coyle:

Co-chair

Damien’s background includes roles in the public, education and voluntary sectors. He held senior management positions at the Community Fund and Big Lottery Fund. His qualifications include Arts, Education, and Business Administration. He established the PGD/MA course in Cultural Management at UU and is a former CEO of University of Atypical and Vice Chair of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. He was awarded an MBE in 2016, and in 2022 he won the CO3 Leadership Award for Leading a small organisation, and was the recipient of the UU Distinguished Graduate Award in 2023. As a visual artist, he has exhibited locally, nationally and internationally, and has published writings on art, history, culture and architecture. Damien is hearing impaired, disabled,  and neurodivergent.

Image of Damien Coyle, white man is in centre frame of photograph, he is wearing a suit and black glasses, he has grey hair pulled back into a pony tail and a full grey beard, he is looking directly at the camera.

Noelle Mc Alinden:

Co-chair

Noelle McAlinden is co-chair of the Northern Ireland Mental Health Arts Festival and Vice-Chair of the Centre for Contemporary Arts, Derry~Londonderry. She has been active as a creative adviser, artist, curator, arts educationalist, and human rights activist for almost four decades, working across Ireland, the UK, and Internationally, with statutory, voluntary, youth and community sectors. She was formerly Chair of Creative Youth Partnerships NI; Chair of the Forum for local Government and the Arts; Board member of the Arts Council NI, Void Gallery, Nerve Centre, and Beckett, Wilde, and FLive arts festivals; and High Sheriff of Fermanagh (2023). She was creative adviser to Derry~Londonderry’s first UK City of Culture (2013). She is a recipient of the Sir Ken Robinson Individual Award. She is a Hope ambassador and founder member of Hope, Healing and Growth. She is an ambassador for positive mental and emotional wellbeing, dedicated to the prevention of suicide, and a member of Ohana ZERO suicide. Noelle is a TEDx speaker.  

Image of Noelle Mc Alinden, white women looking to left of camera she has medium length white blonde hair, red lipstick, wearing one dangling earring and a patterned top

Frank Liddy:

Trustee

Frank Liddy was a driving forces in the Twinbrook Residents Association in the seventies and eighties, taking a break for a short period to try his hand as a saxophonist in a punk band, before embracing the study of Zen Buddhism and mindfulness.

He has over 35 years’ practice-based experience with mindfulness programmes that have helped to transform the lives of many people across Ireland.

Frank is the co-founder of the Black Mountain Zen Centre and Compassionate City Belfast. He now lives in North Belfast but a return to Twinbrook is on the cards. 

Image of Frank Liddy, white man with black rectangle glasses and  white beard, he is looking directly at the camera

Bronagh Lawson:

Trustee

Bronagh Lawson is a socially and spiritually engaged artist, writer, curator. With a focus on art as a key transformation lever in the on going transformation of our traumatised society. She has 13 year collaboration with Adjunct Professor of art therapy Suellen Semekoiski at the school of art Institute Chicago where together they have developed a form of contemporary art underpinned with art therapy that acts as a healing mechanism. She writes a weekly art column for Belfast Media group and has contributed to Fortnight Magazine and Art UK. In 2020 she published a book Belfast City of Light based on her experience of going to every church in Belfast for a service. A Fulbright scholar, she has won awards for her work with art and dementia with the Ulster Museum, A regional talk talk digital heroes award for her development and running voluntarily an online Platform for artists, galleries and audiences in Northern Ireland and during her 13 years of working on business/ community development within the enterprise sector she won awards for her finance training from the FSA. A gender equality award from European Equal programme and has helped hundreds of people into full or part time work, education or self employment.

 

She has 20 + years of board experience Current Chair of Bbeyond, previous chair of PsSquared, Belfast Print Workshop and Women’s Tec. 

 

Her work is held in a number of collections including the Office of public works, UTV, South Eastern Health Trust, City East, Irish Architectural Archive, Ulster Museum and Belfast Health and Social Care Trust.

Image of Bronagh Lawson, a white woman looking to the left of camera, her curly brown hair covers her face, she is wearing a bright organe coat

William Nicholson:

Trustee

An experienced Independent Arts, Health and Wellbeing Consultant deeply passionate about the role that arts, culture and creativity can play in improving people's health and wellbeing. Will has relocated to Northern Ireland from London in 2022 and is initiating the development of the Northern Ireland Creative Health Network having established and experienced the benefits of similar initiatives in England.

 

Will has been involved in a wide range of arts and health work from local to national level in the UK and Ireland including; supporting the development of a Creative Health Toolkit for Integrated Care Systems for the UK National Centre for Creative Health, developing arts and health strategies for the Greater London Authority, Southwark Council and King’s College London and facilitating a culture and social prescribing conference in partnership with King's College London and The Science Gallery and a Museum’s and Mental Health event for the Baring Foundation. Will was co-founder of the Southwark Culture Health and Wellbeing Partnership, one of the first place-based creative health networks and strategic approaches to arts and health in a local authority area. Will recently facilitated a session at the 2023 annual national arts and health gathering led by Réalta, the National Body for Arts + Health in Ireland. 

 

Outside of Arts and Health, Will is the Convenor of A Better Way, a UK-wide cross sector network of 1,500 senior leaders committed to a fairer society through transforming services and system change; recently working as a learning partner for NHS England and 16 Integrated Care Board's on better partnership working with people and communities. He is a Chartered Accountant and trustee of several charities including the Northern Ireland Mental Health and Arts Festival, An Rath Dubh Community Hall in Moneyneena, Co-Chair of STEPS Mental Health in Draperstown and Strategic Director for Ulster Squash.

Image of William Nicholson, asian man looking at camera, he is wearing a suit, he is smiling and has short black hair

Brenda Brady:

Trustee

Brenda Brady is currently a research Fellow, Queen’s University Belfast.

Brenda’s background includes roles in the civil service, social services and the community and voluntary sectors working in the areas of family and childcare, ADHD and community development. She is currently a research fellow in Queen’s University working in the area of youth justice and adversity.  Brenda is a social worker and has worked across the fields of probation, mental health, learning disability and trauma.  Her undergraduate qualifications include modern and contemporary English Literature, Bachelor of Social work and a Masters Degree (MRes) in social science research. She is the recipient of the Queen’s University Brian Rankin Medal for Social Work academic achievement and the Faculty Porter Scholarship in 2018. Presently she is about to complete a PhD at Queen’s University researching the relationship between mental health stigma, arts-based interventions and help-seeking in Northern Ireland and has built up strong collaborative links with other universities and organisations in the community and voluntary sector where the focus is the arts and mental health and community development. Another role Brenda is involved in is chair of the board of governors of a secondary school where the arts have been fostered at the heart of the school’s social, cultural and emotional development and have been used to promote wellbeing, enhance achievement and provide pupils with a voice and platform for self-expression and visibility.

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Dr Jonathan McCrea MCSP:

Trustee

Jonnie graduated with an Honours Degree and a PhD in Physiotherapy from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh and has worked in clinical, academic and research settings in the statutory and third sector. One of the first patients he assessed was a Leprosy patient, a fisherman in his dugout canoe, while they both floated down a river in the Amazon, in Brazil with Dr Bill Woods OBE. Most recently he was Head of Adult Services at Brain Injury Matters and from 2025 has been a Lecturer in Physiotherapy at the University of Ulster.

 

With his expertise in Evidence Based Practice he developed the concept and model of Human Rights Based Practice demonstrating it’s outworking through the UN Convention on the Rights of Disabled People by eradicating exclusion, challenging societal norms and changing expectations.

In 2023 he won the CO3 ‘Health Care Advocate of the Year Award’ for his outstanding and significant contribution to his profession and community, through his leadership, vision and drive.

In 2024 his work was included as a case study in the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy report, ‘Rehabilitation, recovery and reducing health inequity: easing the pain (2nd edition)’ as was described as follows:

“The unusual element, radical even, is that this not only engages people with an ABI to take part in the arts and sports, but protects their engagement from being turned into therapy, rehabilitation or a health outcome. There is a therapeutic benefit for all of us in society as we engage in the arts and sports, so the primary objective was for people with an ABI to also be able to take part on their own terms, on an equal basis as others, for its own sake.”

Image of Jonathan McCrea, a white man standing centre frame, he is wearing black glasses, and a checkered shirt, he has short gret hair

OUR STAFF:

Grace Fairley

Creative Programmes Coordinator

Grace Fairley is an arts organiser and artist, with a passion for making the arts accessible.

She has 8 years experience working in the arts and culture sector alongside the disability sector. She has worked with a range of charities and brands both locally and internationally, currently she is completing a Masters degree in Disability Studies at the University of Leeds.

If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in the work we showcase, resources are available here.
OUR SUPPORTERS
Registered with the Charity Commission for Northern Ireland. Number 103013
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