Archive - Performance Events | printer friendly |
Project Arts Centre present a 2 day workshop with UK theatre company Quarantine on 3 and 4 Feb 2010

A FRAGILE GRIP ON REALITY

ALL DAY
3 & 4 FEB 2010
Workshop
Venue TBC

Quarantine
Presented by Project Arts Centre

€50


A FRAGILE GRIP ON REALITY – a two day workshop with Quarantine

An exciting opportunity to take part in a workshop with Quarantine, one of the UK’s most exciting theatre companies, led by Artistic Directors Richard Gregory and Renny O’Shea. This two-day workshop will be hosted by Project Arts Centre on 3 & 4 February 2010.

The workshop will form an introduction to Quarantine's theatre practice, examining their work through discussion and video presentation. The workshop will also include a number of practical sessions based around series of task-based exercises, exploring themes such as:

•    The impossibility of authenticity: developing performance material based on personal experience;
•    Exposing your self: honesty, fragility & generosity in performance;
•    On permeability: making theatre where the roles of performer and audience can be blurred, exchanged or even removed...
•    Connecting the personal and the political

The workshop is open to all and Quarantine are keen to work with a mix of experienced artists, performers, theatre makers and people who have never done anything like this before…

If you are interested in participating in the workshop email us and tell us a bit about yourself and why you would like to take part. Applications should be emailed to  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it with 'Quarantine' in the subject line, no later than Monday 25 January 2010. The cost of participation is €50 and places are limited to 15.

More information on Quarantine is available on their website.

Quarantine is quite simply a marvel, a company that's right at the forefront of British theatre…..immensely touching, totally human yet also intellectually rigorous in their examination of the nature of performance and the raising of questions about what makes theatre seem real and reality so strongly theatrical…
Lyn Gardner, The Guardian, October 2009

***** ‘intimate, life-affirming, utterly magical and unmissable.
Noeleen Dowling, The Irish Times, on Susan and Darren, Dublin Fringe Festival September 2008