Young Hearts Run Free @ DEAF

Young Hearts Run Free @ DEAF

Young Hearts Run Free @ DEAFYoung Hearts Run Free have a number of events scheduled as part of this year’s DEAF Festival, including a photography exhibition, a 1922 movie screening and another of their BYOB events.
Young Hearts Run Free have a number of events scheduled as part of this year’s DEAF Festival, including a photography exhibition, a 1922 movie screening and another of their BYOB events.

Haxan: Witchcraft Through the Ages – Benjamin Christensen’s 1922 documentary – with live score from 3epKano.
Unitarian Church, 112 St. Stephen’s Green West, Dublin 2
Friday 30th, 10pm €8
3epKano compound their reputation for subtle invention and original composition with a specially composed performance for Benjamin Christensen’s 1922 documentary ‘Haxan: Witchcraft Through the Ages. Originally banned in America upon its release, the film is one of the most acclaimed in the canon of Scandinavian cinema, and is a fascinating study of the history of superstition, drawing from the ‘Malleus Maleficarum’, a 15th century guide for inquisitors.

We Love Sinking Our Teeth / a BYOB event
The Basement, Clarendon House, Clarendon Street, Dublin 2
Saturday 31st, € 15
Following on from ‘We Love Yule’, ‘Hide & Seek’, and ‘Making Hay’, Young Hearts Run Free present another eclectic line-up. Since its inception in 2008, this series of nights rotates across the city in search of interesting spaces, promoting the best in creative community and culture, while also supporting the Simon Community. The night features a line-up of very special guests , along with music, film, performance, art and cake. In keeping with the nature of the venue, you can Bring Your Own Booze!


Hide That Can
Photography exhibition by Deirdre O’ Callaghan
Venue: No. 13 North Great Georges Street
Thurs 22nd-Sat 31st 11am – 6pm
Admission FREE (donations appreciated, and will go directly to Arlington House, Camden, London.)
Sat 24th – Q and A and official launch with Deirdre O’Callaghan.
Built by a Lord Rowton in 1905, Arlington House in Camden, London was intended as a refuge for impoverished manual labourers, but over the decades that followed it came to house predominantly Irish-born emigrant workers who had fallen into destitution. Its many passing residents included the Irish literary giant Brendan Behan. Four years in the making, ‘Hide That Can’ provides not just a portrait of the despair and frailty of many Irish in London, it also offers a homily on the human spirit, recording stories that lives that would otherwise be lost. Through the exhibition, O’Callaghan aims to promote the work of the Simon Community in Dublin and of Aisling in London. O’Callaghan’s images have previously featured in Dazed & Confused, The Observer, The Face and Mojo , while ‘Hide That Can’ was awarded Book of the Year by The International Centre of Photography in 2003.

www.myspace.com/youngheartsrunfreeevents
http://deafireland.com/2009/

 

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