Kindur - The Adventurous Life Of Icelandic Sheep
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Kindur - The Adventurous Life Of Icelandic Sheep

Spréacha 2012 / TPO Company, Italy

Sun 17 - Mon 18 Jun 2012 SUN 17 JUNE 2PM & 4PM // MON 18 JUNE 10AM & 12 NOON Main Auditorium // €5 // Dur: 50 Mins

Fingal’s International Arts Programme for Children presents 'Kindur - The Adventurous Life Of Icelandic Sheep'. Kindur is Icelandic for ‘sheep’ and you can join these three adventurous woolly mammals on a voyage through the extremes of the Atlantic and its seasons. Discover a stunning Icelandic world through TPO’s award winning digital technology and multimedia. Meet trolls and elves, travel through wild moor land, run over glaciers or peek inside northern lights and geysers. Listen to the rumbling of a gigantic waterfall and run inside a blazing volcano as Iceland’s spectacular landscapes form the backdrop to an intensely visual geological journey. Kindur is an absorbing, interactive experience for children from 5 years and up. If your heart lights up, your turn has come to join the group of sheep travelling through the mysterious and cold lands of Iceland.

SUN 17 JUNE 2PM & 4PM // MON 18 JUNE 10AM & 12 NOON
All tickets: €5 // Age 5+ // Dur: 50 Mins // 2 teachers free per class

Read an interview here with Jo Hammett abour Kindur ... 

Read a Review from The Edinburgh Guide here ...
Read a Review from The Guardian here ... 
Read a Review from The Scotsman here ... 



SPRÉACHA WORKSHOPS
To celebrate the arrival of Italy’s TPO with the Spréacha show ‘Kindur: The Adventurous Life Of Icelandic Sheep’, we are offering free workshops to the first class to book into each performance of the show. We will come to your school and introduce some of the themes of the show with a specially designed workshop by dance facilitator Mark Rogers. Please enquire about the availability of these workshops at the time of booking.

FAMILY DAY: Crafty Adventures
SUN 17 JUN 2012 12-3PM
Inspired by the arrival of our Spréacha show, ‘Kindur: The Adventurous Life Of Icelandic Sheep’, we’ll go on a crafty adventure with some natural materials. Using felt, wool and willow, and the help of our artist, join us to create a 3D picture of the natural world around us.


Spréacha is presented by Draíocht in partnership with Fingal County Council.

"“I want to see it more!” piped one girl, as the lights came up; and from young theatregoers, there’s no higher praise than that." The Scotsman

FAMILY DAY: Crafty Adventures

FAMILY DAY: Crafty Adventures

Spréacha 2012

Sun 17 Jun 2012 12-3PM Draíocht Galleries // Free

Inspired by the arrival of our Spréacha show, ‘Kindur: The Adventurous Life Of Icelandic Sheep’, we’ll go on a crafty adventure with some natural materials. Using felt, wool and willow, and the help of our artist, join us to create a 3D picture of the natural world around us.

Read more about Spréacha here ...

Family Day Notes: No booking necessary – just drop in at any stage / Dress for Mess / Unless otherwise stated these activities are designed for children from 5-10 years, though younger and older siblings are welcome to take part / Please be aware that Draíocht’s Family Days are not designed for groups / All children must be accompanied by an adult and all adults must be accompanied by a child.

Allyson Keehan

Allyson Keehan

Life Drawings

Thu 14 Jun - Sat 1 Sep 2012 First Floor Gallery

Poised, elegant and sophisticated; Keehan’s depiction of the nude harmonises the academic tradition with gentle intimacy. Through the medium of Indian ink on paper, she gives a fluid lightness to the subject. Controlled and deliberate brush marks are juxtaposed beside happy instances of drips and bleeds, with watermarks giving life and movement to the subjects. The drawings are taken beyond the study of the human form and the models expression and identity come to life. Life drawing is seen as one of the enduring and most difficult themes in visual arts. Keehan’s approach is both expressive and considered, a complimentary extension of Keehan’s other work in oil paint. 

Born in Limerick in 1978. Keehan graduated from Byam Shaw School of Art (University of the Arts London) in 2004 with a MA in Fine Art, after completing a BA(Hons) Fine Art Painting in 2002 from Limerick School of Art and Design. Keehan has exhibited widely including London, Berlin and extensively through Ireland, including solo shows ‘Shimmeriing Synthetic Appearances; I Want To Put You Back In’ at Queen Street Studios Gallery, Belfast in January 2012 and ‘Lookie Likie; Mimetic Protagonist’ at The Molesworth Gallery in 2011. Keehan won the Merit Award in The Golden Fleece Award 2012. She is exhibiting in this years RHA Annual, and in January 2012 she started a six month residency in the RHA Studios. In 2010 Keehan undertook a residency in Takt Berlin. She now lives and works in Dublin.

Deirdre Byrne

Deirdre Byrne

After The Great Scaldwood

Thu 14 Jun - Sat 1 Sep 2012 Ground Floor Gallery

After The Great Scaldwood developed out of a yearlong residency at Draίocht.

Central to Byrne’s work is an exploration of the past in terms of former histories of current sites. Byrne has focussed on two sites in particular, the Blanchardstown centre where Draίocht is located and the Dunsink Observatory, 5 kilometres away.  Through research and site visits, Byrne uncovered aspects of the location’s history in the 17th century which revealed The Great Scaldwood. This ancient forest stretched from the river Tolka to beyond Coolmine and was inhabited by wild boar and wolves until an extensive wolf cull made the wolf population in Ireland extinct.

Byrne links the past with the present in drawings such as Trace and Trail and The Great Scaldwood and in the Wolfcull series of paintings. In Trace and Trail, we can see faint apparitions of wolves passing in front of the entrance to the Blanchardstown centre. The Great Scaldwood refers to the ancient forest, but here we see trees from the immediate urban area and a sign for the forest created using type from a selection of shop fronts.

The Moonrock series of drawings depicts a story that emerged from research into the Dunsink Observatory. After the Apollo11 expedition to the moon, two pieces of lunar rock were presented to Ireland, one of which was kept at the Observatory. A fire at the Observatory in 1977 led to debris from the building being dumped in the adjacent landfill. It is thought that the lunar rock is buried somewhere within the landfill.

The drawings are made with fine line drawing pens and Indian ink on Polyart paper. Byrne experiments with the materials, allowing the ink to flow across the paper and under masking tape which is removed and drawn over when dry. Layers of ink and water are applied in a succession of drips, sprays and splashes. Similarly the paintings are made up of layers of paint which are sanded back and repainted a number of times.

Byrne graduated with first class honours from NCAD in Fine Art Painting in 2003 and a Postgraduate Diploma in Art and Design Education in 2011. Previous exhibitions include Town and Country Monster Truck Gallery and Studios (2009), Amharc Fhine Gall – It's All in the Detail, curated by Caroline Cowley, Draíocht (2008), Winter Salon, Temple Bar Gallery and Studios (2008), Hi-Vis Across The Way (2008). Other Residency awards include the Tyrone Guthrie Centre, Monaghan and SÍM, Reykjavík, Iceland. 

Web: www.deirdrebyrne.com

Read Des Kenny's chat with Deirdre here ...

WHAT’S IN THE GALLERY?

WHAT’S IN THE GALLERY?

DRAÍOCHT AND SCHOOLS

Mon 2 Apr - Fri 29 Jun 2012 Draíocht Galleries // Free

These tours are intended to facilitate the understanding of what your students can see in the gallery and encourage students to explore and to voice their opinions about what the artist is doing, or issues raised by the artists work. If you would like your class to visit please contact Sarah on 01 8852622 to arrange a short tour. Tours are free and where possible can include a tour of the whole building. Class numbers are restricted to 25 students with accompanying teacher.