Who we are

Cork Cultural Companions is an Age & Opportunity Arts initiative, delivered by Muintir Cork and supported by the HSE and Cork City and County Councils. Cork Cultural Companions has local networks of members who attend events together regularly in Cork City, Mallow, Bantry and East Cork.

Thursday, 31 October 2024

Events at Greywood Arts Killeagh

 

Oil Painting with Aga Krym
Thursdays 7-9pm, Nov 7–28
€75 for 4 sessions
Book Online HERE

Over the course of 4 weeks, Aga Krym will lead you through the basic techniques of oil painting, exploring colour theory, understanding light and shadow, developing techniques in perspective and composition & creating atmosphere in your paintings. Aga Krym is an artist who works primarily as a painter, with a keen interest in evaluating the emotional meaning of landscape. Basic materials provided, feel free to bring your own!
SpaceFest 2024 is Set to Launch
SpaceFest, run by Greywood Arts in partnership with the National Space Centre (NSC) and supported by Taighde Éireann – Research Ireland, celebrates Science Week by combining science and the arts to explore the cosmos. This year’s festival offers a week-long programme for adults, teens, and families, running from Sunday, 10 November through Sunday, 17 November.

Now in its fourth year, SpaceFest is expanding beyond its previous homebase at the NSC. 2024 events will be held across Cork City at venues including Marina Market, UCC, Blackrock Castle Observatory, and Cork County Cricket Club. In East Cork, activities will take place at Greywood Arts (Killeagh) and the National Space Centre (Midleton).
Attendees can look forward to experiments, exhibitions, tours, classes, workshops, and more – read the full programme of events at www.spacefest.ie
Some of the dozen events around Cork City and County include:
The week culminates with Cosmic Debris (Free), an immersive multimedia exhibition that challenges the audience to rethink our place in the cosmos and the impact we leave behind. Held at the National Space Centre beneath the site's iconic 32-metre Big Dish, tickets include a tour of the facility, which only opens to the public for this annual event.
 
Greywood Artists-in-residence Nicholas Carn (UK)Kerry Guinan (IE) and artist/engineer Luisa Charles (UK) present collaboratively devised kinetic, levitating sculptures and moving images in response to the issue of space debris. Selected from over 100 applicants, these three internationally exhibited artists engaged with both Blackrock Castle Observatory and UCC’s Crawford Observatory during their residency at Greywood Arts in Killeagh in order to bring hard science into the creative interpretation on exhibit.
 
Big Listening and Radio Silence, featuring sound, sculptures and listening devices created by nearly 150 young participants from Greywood’s space-themed STEAM programme will also be on display for visitors to see and interact with.
As one of a number of accessibility initiatives rolled into the Festival, a special session for Deaf and Hard of Hearing visitors facilitated by ISL interpreter Keira O’Connell is available for booking online with the rest of the week-long programme

Coach House Creative Hub

We are now accepting Expressions of Interest from any facilitators for workshops or classes.

Both the classroom and first floor Event Space are available for rent.

Studio Bosca will be available to rent in 2025!

Expressions of Interest for Workshops/Classes

Send an email to 
create@greywoodarts.org detailing:

  • What is the workshop/class?
  • Target audience & number of participants
  • Any additional information

 

Creative Process Residency
Applications for 2025 NOW OPEN!

Apply now!
Learn more
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Main Street
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Ireland

Sirius Arts Cobh Exhibitions and Events

 


Local Colour for SIRIUS: Selected Works from the Archives and Collection
 
SIRIUS is the custodian of the 1850s architectural drawings for the clubhouse of the Royal Cork Yacht Club, the building it occupies, and miscellaneous documents related to its transition from that function into an art centre. In addition, since its foundation in the mid-1990s, it has taken in works through donations by artists who exhibited and/or were in residence, and more recently through inviting artists to respond to Cobh and/or County Cork’s context.

This exhibition features a selection of works and materials from the SIRIUS archives and collection that were uncovered during research and cataloguing undertakings initiated in 2021. The artists presented in this exhibition engage with themes of migration, place and environment. Highlights include Doug Dubois, Patrick Ireland, Danny McCarthy, Maura Sheehan and Softday, who were in residence and created works inspired by Cobh’s landscape and social context.

This exhibition is curated by Miguel Amado, director, with assistance by Sarah Long, 2023 critic in residence, and Andrea Spörri, 2022 curatorial trainee.

This exhibition is realised with the support of the Regional Museum Exhibitions Scheme (2024), Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media.

 
Patrick Ireland, Study for the West Wall of the Old Yacht Club, 1995. Installation view, Brian ODoherty: Reading, Time, SIRIUS, 2023. Photograph: Nic Flanagan. Courtesy of the Estate of Brian ODoherty

Patrick Ireland
Study for the West Wall of the Old Yacht Club, 1995
Ink and graphite on paper
66 x 101.5 cm
 
This drawing was part of Patrick Ireland’s plans for the mural One, Here, Now (1996), a floor-to-ceiling piece painted directly on the walls of SIRIUS, exhibited at the time of its making and presented again in 2018 after restoration. It is now preserved behind a second ‘layer’ of wall. The drawing depicts abstract colour fields, symbols and imagery, for instance Ogham characters. Philosophically, they represent the essence of what is to be in the world in terms of a self (I/One), in space (Here) and time (Now). The work is a contemporary metaphor for the experience of reality through the use of archaic signs.


Softday
As I Roved Out One Morning, 2021
HD video, colour, sound, 4 minutes
 
As I Roved Out One Morning is a sea shanty written by Hannah Fahey (composition) and Softday (lyrics), performed by the Softday Deep Water Singers via long-distance communication. It takes as its subject a controversial plan for an incinerator in Ringaskiddy, Cork Harbour, put forward by the waste management company Indaver on various occasions since 2001. It brings together field recordings, conversations, transcripts from An Bord Pleanála oral hearings and reasoned arguments submitted to the High Court. It merges the tradition of folk songs that accompany rhythmical labour with the symbolism of political messages contesting the powers that be.

 

Softday, As I Roved Out One Morning (still), 2021. Commissioned by SIRIUS. Courtesy of the artists and SIRIUS
Sirius Arts Centre
The Old Yacht Club
Westbourne Place
Cobh, Co. Cork
P24 F209
Ireland

siriusartscentre.ie

Opening hours: Wednesday - Saturday, 12:00 - 17:00

West Cork Arts Centre Panel Discussion School of Hibernia (after Raphael)

 

Presenting the School of Hibernia (after Raphael) on Saturday 2 November at 3.00pm 


This panel discussion features members of the arts collective Na Cailleacha: curator/writer Catherine Marshall and artist Gerda Teljeur; alongside choreographer Cindy Cummins who all participated in The School of Hibernia. The School of Hibernia is on exhibition at Uillinn from 1 to 11 November.


The project aimed to undermine patriarchal systems of thought and knowledge in western education as transmitted from Ancient Greece to the Italian Renaissance and thence to the present day. To do this Na Cailleacha invited leading Irish women to take part in a tableau based on Raphael's famous School of Athens fresco in the Vatican, but with an emphasis on women's contribution to education as we know it today in place of Raphael's male dominated cast. The tableau took place in Trinity College and included such participants as Mary Robinson, first woman Chancellor of the University and Dr Linda Doyle its first woman Provost.


Catherine will give an overview of the project and the themes it addresses; Gerda will offer an insight into the process, especially costume-provision from her perspective as a member of the art collective behind it, and Cindy will discuss her role in the choreographical and theatrical aspects of the event, and what it meant to her to be invited to participate.



Uillinn: West Cork Arts Centre is delighted to present The School of Hibernia. This project by the art collective Na Cailleacha, is part of their ongoing aim to increase visibility for women artists and to challenge patriarchy. They have taken a key work of European Renaissance art history, Raphael’s School of Athens (Vatican Museum 1509–1511), and recreated it to reflect a more inclusive world view.


Raphael’s original fresco drew together the dominant influences on academia deriving from Ancient Greece and led by such male figures as Plato, Aristotle, Pythagoras, Euclid and Archimedes. Na Cailleacha’s full-scale re-enactment of Raphael’s School of Athens with an all-women cast is set in Trinity College Dublin. This image features forty-one contemporary Irish women from a variety of age profiles and backgrounds, all leaders in their fields, who have contributed to human knowledge. Together they draw on traditions and learning from other continents, abilities and social backgrounds, including history, the arts, sciences, medicine, engineering, the law, economics, social activism and sport, that both subvert and expand on the earlier traditions.


The School of Hibernia (after Raphael) was created at The Museum Building (1854–7), Trinity College Dublin on 9 March 2024. This great architectural monument to education was designed by Thomas Deane and Benjamin Woodward. No setting could be more appropriate, with its architectural references to the original painting and the wider references to academic history that the building and Trinity College embody.


Na Cailleacha is a collective of six visual artists: Helen Comerford, Barbara Freeman, Patricia Hurl, Rachel Parry, Therry Rudin, Gerda Teljeur; one jazz musician Carole Nelson and curator/writer Catherine Marshall who have come together to explore being female, older creatives.


The figures of Artemis and Minerva in the background are the work of Helen Comerford, sculptor, painter and member of Na Cailleacha, who died very suddenly earlier this year. Thanks to David Lambert and Medb Lambert for their inclusion in this exhibition.


A documentary film of the project is in preparation by Therry Rudin of Na Cailleacha and will be released later this year, while a print of the event (limited to an edition of 10) is also available.


The image was created by Ros Kavanagh (www.roskavanagh.com)


The exhibition continues until 11 November 2024


www.westcorkartscentre.com

Cork Arts Theatre this month

 

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Spooktacular Comedy at the CAT...

The Improv Halloween Murder Mystery


Limited Tickets Left!!!


Featuring Laura O’Mahony, Laura Harte, Dominic MacHale and John McCarthy from The Improv Panto, and Annette Roche and Adrian Scanlan from Snatch Comedy.


Wednesday 30th October – Saturday 2nd November @ 8pm


Your favourite Improv Murder Mystery Gang are back with their annual Halloween hit show. 


There’s been a murder, and everyone is a suspect! Whodunnit? Who knows?!

With no script to fall back on, the actors will create the entire plot, on the spot! As always with this gang, things get out of hand very quickly with deadly, unpredictable (and hilarious) consequences.


Who will the victim be? And who is the devious murderer? No-one knows, not even the actors on stage! With audience suggestions and no script in sight, The Improv Halloween Murder Mystery is set to be Cork Arts Theatre’s riotous comedy highlight of the season.


*Due to the unpredictable nature of the show and the audience suggestions, this show is not suitable for under 16s.


Running time, approx. 2 hours incl. an interval.

Tickets: €18 Standard/€15 Concession

Book Tickets

Coming Soon...

The Cork One Act Theatre Festival


Wednesday 16th – Saturday 19th October


Theatre groups from around the country will gather to compete for the all-important points in their bid to reach the All-Ireland One Act Final.

Participating groups will stage a wide variety of plays showcasing the very best acting and directing talent. The line up for each of the four nights is as follows:


Wednesday 6th of November 2024:

Gunpowder Productions (Open): Semper Fidelis by Henry Hudson

Shannonside Drama Group (Confined): A Matter of Life and Death by Michael Sullivan

Conna Players (Confined): It’s Always The Quiet Ones by Niall Carmody


Thursday 7th of November 2024:

Kilmeen Drama Group (Open): The Quiet Land by Malcahy McKenna

Carraig Na BhFear Drama Society (Confined): Tom by Noelle Clarke

Coachford Players (Confined): Sinking by Les Clarke


Friday 8th of November 2024:

Camross Drama Group (Confined): The Chipvan Plays Dixie by Robert Iles

Brideview Drama Group (Open): Save Me' by Mark O’Leary

Skibbereen Theatre Society (Confined): Dead Man’s Bells by Méabh de Brún


Saturday 9th of November 2024:

Borrisokane Players (Confined): Isn’t the Water Lovely Today by John McDwyer

Enniscorthy Theatre Company (Confined): Going Home by Paul O’ Reilly

Torch Players (Open): Poker Night by Dan Mooney

Book Tickets

Sugar

Written & performed by Michael Patric

Directed by Geoff Gould


Tuesday 19th – Saturday 23rd November


“You must have the craic. I don’t trust any fella who can’t have d’aul craic.”


From the same team who brought you, SEAN MOYLAN, AN IRISH REVOLUTIONARY, SUGAR is written and performed by Michael Patric (AN CAILÍN CIÚIN, SMOTHER, FRONTIER) and directed by Geoff Gould. A comedy with a big heart set in Mallow sugar factory prior to its closure.


Danyl Sweetnam describes his last days as an Irish Sugar employee. As much as he tries to stay on topic, he can’t help veering off towards “the craic” and taking us on a journey of hilarious shenanigans.

Book Tickets
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Cork Arts Theatre - "The Little Theatre with a Big Heart!"

Cork Arts Theatre | Camden Court Carroll's Quay | Cork, IE