Upcoming Events

Dive into our programme.
Choose from theatre, music, dance, visual arts and everything in between.

Drip Feed by Karen Cogan

Theatre / 19 Sep 2018 - 22 Sep 2018 16/14 Space Upstairs
Shortlisted for Soho Theatre’s biennial Verity Bargate Award comes this blistering new play from Stewart Parker Trust Award winner Karen Cogan, a fast, infectiously dark comedy about the messiness of being youngish, female and queer in Ireland.
Read More

My Dad's Blind by Anna Sheils-McNamee

Theatre / 18 Sep 2018 - 22 Sep 2018 16/14 Space Upstairs
Inspired by raw audio recordings, this is a true story about Anna's blind Dad. Examining misplaced pity in all its guises, this is an irreverent look at what happens when a parent loses his sight while his daughter loses her mind.
Read More

Susie and the Story Shredder by Bombinate Theatre

Theatre / 08 Sep 2018 - 16 Sep 2018 12/8 Cube
King Levi says that stories make your brain go fuzzy and your hands turn green. All stories are banned in the Kingdom of Levitas. It’s Susie and Shredder’s job to enforce the King’s law, shredding stories from dusk ‘til dawn
Read More

FABLE by HUMAN COLLECTIVE

Dance / 09 Sep 2018 - 16 Sep 2018 8-12 Space Upstairs
A sinister dance-theatre production for young adults. An all-male cast of highly physical street dancers dissect modern life, from the unanticipated consequences of new technologies to political conspiracy and manmade horrors and drawing on classic dystopian cinema and cautionary tales.
Read More

Oneday by Dick Walsh and James Moran

Theatre / 08 Sep 2018 - 15 Sep 2018 15/13 Cube
Dick Walsh and James Moran are staging news articles published on 13th March 2012. Or in other words, they're examining a dying media using a dead artform.
Read More

Cock, Cock.. Who’s There? by Samira Elagoz

Theatre / 14 Sep 2018 - 15 Sep 2018 14-16 Space Upstairs
An award-winning performance about violence and intimacy. Samira Elagoz takes us along on her personal research project across three continents. From online platforms to close encounters, she showcases gender relations in all their brutal and wonderful ambivalence.
Read More

Skip to content