Special Event / Talks and Readings / Theatre / 21-21 July 2023

Pan Pan’s 10th International Mentorship Symposium 

Tickets: Free

 

Please note: This is a rescheduled event that will take place on Friday 21 July. Our box office team has been in touch with all ticketholders. For queries, you can contact us at box-office@projectartscentre.ie, or by calling +353 1 881 9613.

Show Time: 1:30pm - 4:30pm (Inc. 15min Interval)

The Pan Pan Symposium Day marks the end of the 10th Pan Pan International Mentorship with the participants Fiona Breen, Choy-Ping Clarke-Ng 吳彩萍, Sara Joyce, Lauren Moukarzel, Jack Rogers, and mentor Susanne Kennedy. 

The Symposium Day is an informal event where the participants will introduce and discuss some of the ideas and working methods that they explored during the mentorship. Our current mentor Susanne Kennedy will also give a short introduction to her work and practice. Pan Pan’s Symposium Day offers a fascinating and unique insight into the way theatre is made, for audiences and theatre makers alike. All are welcome, though places are limited. 

The Pan Pan International Mentorship is funded by the Arts Council. The Goethe Institut and the Gate Theatre are mentorship partners. Thanks to Project Arts Centre for their support. 

Accessibility

If you require assistance for your visit, please do not hesitate to contact us at access@projectartscentre.ie or call 01 8819 613. You can find the latest information about Project’s accessibility here.

Credits

Mentor: Susanne Kennedy
Participants: Fiona Breen, Choy-Ping Clarke-Ng 吳彩萍, Sara Joyce, Lauren Moukarzel and Jack Rogers
Producer: Emma Coen
Production Manager: Gary Maguire

Biographies

Susanne Kennedy

Susanne Kennedy is a theatre director whose singular aesthetic and approach introduce a fresh current to male-centric perspectives that ground Western theatre.

In her works, distorted by masks, playback dialogue, doppelgängers and multimedia, the actors confront the audience with the question: what does it mean to be human? Susanne Kennedy lives and works as a theatre director and artist in Berlin. Together with the visual artist Markus Selg she explores the boundaries between man and machine. In their theatre works they set up situations where reality and simulation become blurred. Together they create theater installations, opera happenings and exhibitions.

Fiona Breen

As a devisor and performer Fiona Breen’s practice flexes between ecology, autobiography and history.

Her recent performance work includes Gull (Dublin Fringe Festival, 2022) and Root (Dublin Theatre Festival, 2021), which she devised alongside her daughter, Shanna May Breen. In 2019 Fiona composed The Meadow, a site specific soundscape in Birr Workhouse Graveyard, Co. Offaly.

Currently Fiona is working on My brother, your sisters, a new solo performance about her missing brother Peter.

Choy-Ping Clarke-Ng 吳彩萍

Choy-Ping Clarke-Ng 吳彩萍 (they / she) is a Hong Kong-Irish theatre maker and Linbury Prize-winning designer.

They have designed for venues including the Abbey Theatre, Bristol Old Vic and Singapore Repertory Theatre. Their most recent piece of theatre making WINDOW A WORLD was co-produced by Dublin Theatre Festival and BUDA Belgium.

Sara Joyce

Sara is a director/writer who recently directed THE LAST RETURN for Druid. Sara was selected for the 2021 National Theatre director’s course, is a graduate of Old Vic 12, was Resident Director at Almeida and Soho Theatres.

She studied Drama and Theatre at Trinity College and trained at Ecole Jacques Lecoq.

Lauren Moukarzel

Lauren Moukarzel is a playwright working at the intersection of text and technology.

Past work: Rescue Annie (2021), Fetch (2019), Viva Voce (2018) in Dublin Fringe Festival. She was an Abbey Works initiative playwright in 2019 and trained on The Lir Academy’s MFA playwriting programme 2017/18.

Jack Rogers

Jack Rogers is a multi-disciplinary artist from Co. Louth working primarily within the industries of performance, puppetry and set design.

His practice is currently concerned with his relationship to queerness, masculinity, and the rural identity.

Funding

Pan Pan is funded by Arts Council & Dublin City Council

Project Arts Centre is proudly supported by The Arts Council and Dublin City Council.

Skip to content