Dog Project Exhibition Launch with Tom Campbell and Friends: 4th August, 6pm
31 Jul
19 Jul
Currently rehearsing in Camden Palace, is Conflicted Theatre’s presentation of After Jekyll.
“Dr. Jekyll created a potion which he hoped would separate and purify the elements of good and evil which reside in us all. What is truly good and what is truly evil? The difference can be something as simple as perspective. Who is to judge? You? Me? Society?Like Stevenson’s novel, After Jekyll also explores the idea of civilization vs. savagery. How far does civilization bend us from our true nature? Is it for the better or worse?
With the years that have passed since the death of Dr. Jekyll, Dr. Hubert Ucanny can take advantage of huge advances made in psychology by Freud and especially Carl Jung. Hubert can also learn from the mistakes of his predecessor to help him delve even deeper into age old problems associated with good and evil, wrong and right?
Can there ever be a cure for the base side to our nature?
Or is it a part we need within to balance us?
Is good simply in the eye of the beholder?
Have good and evil been constructed as a way of maintaining order?
After Jekyll is a script which came into existence as a result of the seemingly impossible task of producing a worthy adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic, The Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Our story was created because of our position in time. Even those who have not read Jekyll and Hyde will know that they are one and the same. We pay homage to the original novel by dealing with the same issues and themes dealt with in the original, which are still as relevant today, but in the process offer the audience something new. Something which means that our journey will not be distorted by foreknowledge or by assumptions of what the play should be.”
Tickets €8/10 from Pro Musica(Oliver Plunkett St.) & Positively Vintage(Castle St.)
15 Jul
SoundEye Festival of the Arts of the Word has, for the last three years, curated a Alternative Cabaret which combines Poetry, Performance, Music and Film. this year sees a brand new venue but retains the emphasis on all things experimental
this year’s Cabaret will feature: Laura Sheeran, The Quiet Club, Chris Goode, Jonny Liron, Nat Raha, Cork’s Shape Note Singers, Mersk, Trumpets Of Jericho, trad session.etc.
Cassette DJ set from Black Sun DJs
Vegan Cakes from Sugar Moon
(more to be added)
Large room Upstairs
1. The Quiet Club and VJ set by Claire Guerin 9-9.30
2. Cork Shape note singers 9.30-10
3. Laura Sheeran 10-10.30
4. Mersk 11.30.-12
5. Trumpets of Jericho 12-12.30
6. DJ by BlackSun 12.30-1
Cinema/theatre room
1. Experimental film programme 8-9
2. Trad Session 9-9.30
3. Nat Raha 9-9.30
4. Chris Goode and Jonny Liron 10.30-11
Hall
5. Paula selling Cakes
€5 entry
8 Jul
The SoundEye poetry festival is coming to Camden Palace Hotel this year.
Here’s the blurb:
SoundEye Festival of the Arts of the Word, now in its fourteenth year, is delighted to announce the line up of this year’s festival. The poets that SoundEye continues to attract range from new exciting talent to internationally regarded linguistically innovative poets from both Ireland and abroad. Highlights of this year’s programme include a Poetry Ireland reading featuring Irish poet Michael O’Loughlin, and a special envoy from the Greenwich Festival of Women’s Innovative Poetry & Cross-genre Work organised by Carol Watts (Birkbeck University) and Emily Critchley (Greenwich University) which sees the important American poets Rachel Blau Duplessis, Jean Day and Eleni Sikeliano read in Ireland for the first time. In addition the festival will include a critical thread with talks from Dr John Goodby (University of Swansea) and Dr Keston Sutherland (University of Sussex); the DEFAULT reading which showcases new, emerging poets from Ireland and abroad; and a Cabaret night of music, performance and poetry. All this on top of our regular fare of over twenty poets in four venues across the city … and almost all for free.
SoundEye is one of the largest and longest running poetry festivals in Ireland and has attracted praise from critics and poets alike. Poet and Professor Charles Bernstein has described the festival as “Without question … the most innovative and most important literary gathering to take place in Ireland – or just about anywhere else – over the last decade.” Poet and Professor Kenneth Goldsmith, founder of Ubuweb has said “SoundEye is Ireland’s most important literary festival.” We are also a keen participant in Cork’s The Avant festival that runs from the 9th – 18th of July and which brings together Cork’s cultural organisations for nine days of exciting events that include visual art, poetry, performance, sound art, video art and music.