A photographer’s touching tribute to County Mayo
- Text by Megan Wallace
- Photography by Tom Wood
Documentary photographer Tom Wood is best known for his images capturing everyday moments in Merseyside, from its bustling markets to crowded nightclubs. But when it comes to the photographer’s own heritage, “There’s an awful lot more to the story than just Liverpool,” he says.
Wood’s latest photo book, Irish Work (RRB), brings together some of the photographer’s previously unseen images of Ireland, covering 50 years of his own life and his ongoing relationship with County Mayo – the place of his birth. It’s also where he and his parents (one Catholic, one Protestant) were forced to leave from due to Sectarianism and religious norms. It’s clearly a fraught family history, but Wood doesn’t seem to harbour any ill feelings.

The Passing Show, 1996

Intelligence of sheep, Portacloi Bay, Ceathrú Thaidhg, 2017
In fact, it’s quite the opposite: the book is crammed with moments of joy, cherry-picked from Wood’s many years of documenting the area, from the rosy-cheeked children grinning out from leatherette car seats, to a jumble shop bursting with garments.
Then, there are the disarming landscapes, which imbue a sense of grandiosity to the tough and repetitive lives of those who tend to the land as agricultural labourers. A hilltop sheep, somehow made majestic, surveys it’s kingdom in one image, while a woman braves the elements – defiant in her red anorak – in another.
Visiting the area each year on holiday, County Mayo represents an ancestral home to Wood, a place of kinship and longing in equal measure. Referencing the Paul Durcan poem “Going Home to Mayo, Winter, 1949”, Wood recalls the ritual of taking the steam train to the Irish region and his father’s excitement throughout the journey. “Every year, my dad would walk up and down the train [to County Mayo] looking for the most interesting person to sit opposite and engage in conversation with. If they ignored him, he would go and talk to someone else. He was just so excited to be going home,” Wood recalls. “He clearly transmitted that [excitement] to me. It stays the same even now, after 50 years.”

Standing Tall on Gráinne, (quietest cow in Mayo), 1975

Annual Migration, 1996
Describing Irish Work as “personal, about family”, Wood recalls days spent speaking to and recording (some images within the books are film stills) the locals in the tight-knit agricultural community. It was a way for him to learn more about his own history. “I’d meet a farmer up on the hillside and we’d be underneath a mountain and he’d tell me things about my grandfather,” Wood remembers.
While anecdotes like these are full of joy, there’s also a lingering melancholy – a nostalgia for a lifestyle which is all but disappearing. The elders who Wood recalls from his earliest memories are no longer with us. They take with them traditions around the land which will not necessarily be passed on due to mass migration as young people move out of Ireland in search of new opportunities and a different way of life.
“When I began [documenting the area], that old Ireland, my dad’s generation was still there,” Wood explains. “They knew the old days and ways – they were like a different breed, where everything was physical and they were deeply rural.”
With such a clear emotional attachment to the contents of this book, Wood explains that Irish Work set out to “make a different kind of book”. The result is a collection of photos which make tangible Wood’s exploration of a once-removed Irish identity, and one which places the area’s inhabitants, in all their wonder, into full view.

Inherited by Geraldine, 2009

Coastline near Renvyle, 1987

Scots Ground, 1979

Wiring, Nephin Beg Range, 1986

Walk to the Green Rooms, Kilshannig, 1987

Old man looks out/loyal companions, 2005

Plasterers on the Verge, 1987
Irish Work is available now on RRB Photobooks.
Follow Megan Wallace on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
From his skating past to sculpting present, Arran Gregory revels in the organic
Sensing Earth Space — Having risen to prominence as an affiliate of Wayward Gallery and Slam City Skates, the shredder turned artist creates unique, temporal pieces out of earthly materials. Dorrell Merritt caught up with him to find out more about his creative process.
Written by: Dorrell Merritt
In Bristol, pub singers are keeping an age-old tradition alive
Ballads, backing tracks, beers — Bar closures, karaoke and jukeboxes have eroded a form of live music that was once an evening staple, but on the fringes of the southwest’s biggest city, a committed circuit remains.
Written by: Fred Dodgson
This new photobook celebrates the long history of queer photography
Calling the Shots — Curated by Zorian Clayton, it features the work of several groundbreaking artists including Robert Mapplethorpe, Sunil Gupta, Zanele Muholi and more.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Krept & Konan: “Being tough is indoctrinated into us”
Daddy Issues — In the latest from our interview column exploring fatherhood and masculinity, UK rap’s most successful double act reflect on loss, being vulnerable in their music, and how having a daughter has got Krept doing things he’d never have imagined.
Written by: Robert Kazandjian
Vibrant polaroids of New York’s ’80s party scene
Camera Girl — After stumbling across a newspaper advert in 1980, Sharon Smith became one of the city’s most prolific nightlife photographers. Her new book revisits the array of stars and characters who frequented its most legendary clubs.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Bad Bunny: “People don’t know basic things about our country”
Reggaeton & Resistance — Topping the charts to kick off 2025, the Latin superstar is using his platform and music to spotlight the Puerto Rican cause on the global stage.
Written by: Catherine Jones