• Home
  • About
  • After Dark
  • Shop
  • Documenting my town
Menu

Diane muldowney fine art

Freelance artist/photographer based in Lancashire.
  • Home
  • About
  • After Dark
  • Shop
  • Documenting my town

After Dark explores the nightlife of Nelson, Lancashire, through stories, photographs, and voice recordings gathered as part of a commission with This-is-Nelson and In-Situ.

Nelson town centre; Photograph Diane Muldowney.

May 6, 2026

I am a documentary photographer/multidisciplinary artist based in Brierfield, Lancashire. My work explores memory, heritage, and the changing character of northern communities. Through photography, I document people and places that hold stories of working-class life, often focusing on what remains and what has been lost over time.

What excites me about this project is the chance to reconnect with the places that shaped my own youth while discovering the stories of others who shared that same vibrant nightlife. I’m inspired by the idea of breathing new life into forgotten spaces, capturing their atmosphere, their history, and the memories that still linger. I love the mix of photography, research, and conversation, and I’m excited to create a body of work that feels both personal and collective. Most of all, I’m energised by the opportunity to document a part of Nelson that meant so much to so many, and to celebrate it before it slips away completely.


Once the mills fell silent and daylight faded, another side of Nelson came alive. Pubs spilled onto the streets, clubs pulsed with music, working men’s clubs were packed, and taxi ranks filled with people heading home in the early hours. For many, these places were more than venues; they were where friendships were made, romances began, and unforgettable nights unfolded.
This project documents those memories while exploring how nightlife in Nelson has changed over the decades, particularly the sharp decline that began in the early 1990s. Through personal stories, archived memories, photographs, and recorded voices, After Dark asks what happened to the town’s once-thriving night-time culture and what has been lost along the way.
From neon-lit dance floors to quiet streets where venues once stood, this is a portrait of a town after dark, told by the people who lived it.

Nelson, the only Town named after a pub .Lord Nelson. Photo credit Diane Muldowney

The Lord Nelson finally closed its doors after 220 years. The photographs below are from the Closing party in October 2024. It reopened on Boxing Day 2024 and survived for a while, but is now permanently closed.

_R5A1659 copy.jpg
_R5A1844-2 copy.jpg
_R5A1861-Enhanced-NR copy.jpg
_R5A1893 copy.jpg
_R5A2024 copy.jpg
_R5A2196 copy.jpg
_R5A2248 copy.jpg
_R5A2388 copy.jpg
IMG_4756.jpg
_R5A1857-Enhanced-NR copysm.jpg
_R5A2055 copysm.jpg
_R5A2726 copysm.jpg

The Lord Nelson, undergoing renovation. I love the old records stuck to the window and the wardrobe/cloackroom in the corner; it reminds me of Narnia. The years of neglect have taken their toll on this historically important building.

_R5A4607 copysm.jpg
_R5A4627 copysm.jpg
_R5A4641 copysm.jpg
_R5A4648 copysm.jpg
_R5A4651 (2) copysm.jpg
_R5A4654 copysm.jpg
_R5A4687 copysm.jpg
_R5A4693 copysm.jpg
_R5A4698 copysm.jpg
_R5A4702 copy sm.jpg
_R5A4707 copysm.jpg
_R5A4712 copysm.jpg

Fascinating old photographs from the Nelson Library collection: one shows the interior of the Masonic Room, with the ornate ceiling. Interesting to compare with my recent photograph.

_R5A4712 copysm.jpg
20260224_124502.jpg
_R5A4627 copysm.jpg
20260224_124518.jpg

I was delighted to gain entry to the old Blueberries Night Club; it was destroyed by a fire in October 1999. It was due to reopen as the Phoenix Night Club in December 1999. The Phoenix logo is clearly visible on the wall.

Documenting the space was a dream; it brought back so many memories of nights spent in the club in the 1980's. Ghosts of the past appeared: people, music, larger & black, and awful hangovers courtesy of Pernod.

I visited the space numerous times, armed with a camera and tripod. My torchlight created ghostly shadows; Slow-exposure photography captured my movement on the dance floor.

_R5A1156 copysm.jpg
_R5A0947 copysm.jpg
_R5A1087 copysm.jpg
_R5A1102 copysm.jpg
_R5A1120 copysm.jpg
_R5A1120 copysm2.jpg
_R5A1142 copysm.jpg
_R5A1150 (2) copy.jpg
_R5A1155 copy Phoenix copysm.jpg
_R5A1167 copysm.jpg
_R5A1206 copysm.jpg
_R5A1309 copy jp2.jpg
_R5A1309 copysm.jpg
_R5A1345 copy 2 sm.jpg
_R5A1345 copy 2sm.jpg
jp.jpg
sm (2).jpg
sm.jpg
smjp.jpg

The Station Hotel on Hibson Road was built in 1893 and is the last remaining town centre pub, Grade II listed by Historic England.

A wonderful stone-built town centre pub with a traditional dark wood-panelled interior.

_R5A7507 copysm (2).jpg
_R5A5252 copysm.jpg
_R5A7507 copysm.jpg
_R5A5248 copysm.jpg

The last episode of Juliet Bravo was shot at the Station Hotel in 1985; it ended with a fire in the Trax nightclub beneath the hotel. The space was taken over by Wetherspoons in 2000. Now a storage space. Click on the photograph for more images

_R5A5216 copysm.jpg _R5A5222 copysm.jpg _R5A5224 copysm.jpg _R5A5230 copysm.jpg _R5A5232 copysm.jpg

On May 28th, we are showing the last episode of Juliet Bravo. Some of the scenes were shot at the Station Hotel & Trax nightclub.

There are a few pubs and Clubs that still exist in Nelson. I plan on going to visit them all.

Through the years, there have been many. I have a list of over 40,

List of pubs 7 & CLUBS.jpg

Latest Posts

Powered by Squarespace