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Project Arts Centre

Irish arts venue based in Dublin

Project Arts Centre

Summary

Irish arts venue based in Dublin

FieldValue
nameProject Arts Centre
imageLogo-pac.png
address39 East Essex Street
cityTemple Bar, Dublin
countryIreland
coordinates
architectShay Cleary Architects
ownerAuditorium 200 seats
Cube 80 seats
typeTheatre and gallery
opened
years_active1966 to present
rebuilt2000
pushpin_mapIreland Central Dublin
website

Cube 80 seats

Project Arts Centre is a multidisciplinary arts centre based in Temple Bar, Dublin, which hosts visual arts, theatre, dance, music, and performance.

History

Project Arts Centre was founded by Jim FitzGerald and Colm O'Briain in 1967 after a three-week festival at the Gate Theatre in 1966. Project Arts Centre was the first such arts centre in Ireland.

The Centre had several homes before it opened for business in a converted factory on East Essex Street in 1975, This building was demolished in 1998 and a new purpose-built space containing two auditoriums, a gallery and a bar opened on the same site in 2000, as part of the second phase of the regeneration of Temple Bar. The presence of the Centre, along with a number of other cultural institutions in Temple Bar, such as Irish Film Institute, the Temple Bar Gallery and Studios, Black Church Print Studios, the Gallery of Photography, and Temple Bar Music Centre (now the Button Factory), inspired the regeneration of the area as a cultural quarter.

The Centre

The centre has been a venue for many of the city's performing arts festivals, including the Dublin Dance Festival, Dublin Writers Festival, Dublin Fringe Festival and Dublin Theatre Festival. Since the Irish recession there has been an emphasis on cross-cultural productions.

In 2018, street artist Maser painted a mural in support of the Repeal the 8th "pro-choice" campaign, but the Centre was pressured by the Irish Government to paint over it.

Romantic Ireland, an exhibition by Eimear Walshe, curated by Sara Greavu and Project Arts Centre, was selected for the Irish Pavilion at the 60th International Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale (2024).

References

References

  1. "Project Arts Centre".
  2. "PROJECT ARTS CENTRE".
  3. (1992). "Towards a Cultural Democracy". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review.
  4. (1977). "The Theatre and Politics". The Crane Bag.
  5. "About Us".
  6. (2002). "Encouraging Culture-led Regeneration".
  7. (2008). "Creative Cities, Cultural Clusters and Local Economic Development". Edward Elgar Publishing.
  8. (2005). "Cityedge: Case Studies in Contemporary Urbanism". Routledge.
  9. (2004). "Creative planning in Ireland: the role of culture‐led development in Irish planning". European Planning Studies.
  10. (2011). "Staging the "New Irish": Interculturalism and the Future of the Post–Celtic Tiger Irish Theatre". Modern Drama.
  11. "► VIDEO: Project Arts Centre removes Repeal mural".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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