Irlande

Triskel Arts Centre

Établi en 1978, le Centre culturel Triskel est un des centres culturels pluridisciplinaires les plus vieux en Irlande. Il est basé dans la ville de Cork, qui est la deuxième plus grande ville de l'Irlande avec une population combinée avec le plus grand secteur de Cork de 360,000 personnes.

Les arts jouent un rôle important dans la culture de la vie urbaine de Cork. Cork accueille un Festival du Cinéma International, un Festival  International Populaire, une Conférence Internationale de Nouvelles, un Festival International de |Chorales, un Festival International de Jazz, un Festival des Livres du Monde, un Festival du Cinéma Français et un Festival du Milieu de l'été. Triskel est engagée dans la plupart de ces événements en les accueillant ou en programmant un partenariat avec eux. En reconnaissance de son importance culturelle, Cork a été élue Capitale européenne de la Culture en 2005.

La mission de Triskel est de promouvoir et présenter la qualité des arts professionnels et pluridisciplinaires. Cela fonctionne en partenariat avec des organisations dans l'éducation, la jeunesse  et les domaines des arts tant national qu'international et reçoit la plupart de son financement du Conseil des Arts d'Irlande.

La Fondation fournit un soutien logistique et opérationnel au Réseau National en Irlande à travers le Programme de Développement Stratégique des Réseaux (PDSR). Pour plus d’information, veuillez vous référer au document “PDSR Etape 4” dans la colonne des Ressources à droite. Ce document éclaire sur les principales responsabilités et services à fournir par le Coordinateur du Réseau envers les membres jusqu’au 31 aout 2011.

En dessous des Ressources, vous pouvez aussi trouver d’autres documents importants pour le Réseau, tels que : les Règles de Fonctionnement Interne du Réseau, la Liste des Membres et les Résultats du Sondage des membres du Réseau 2010.

Le réseau irlandais consiste en 38 membres. La plupart de ces institutions travaillent dans les secteurs de l'éducation, la jeunesse, les arts et la recherche.

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Résultats du sondage des membres 201042.39 Ko
PDSR Etape 432.52 Ko
Liste des membres74.89 Ko

Latest News

Hip Hop To Cork

Hip Hop To Cork - Sunday 1st May – Triskel Christchurch

This event is the culmination of Youth workshops which took place in three locations in Ireland on the theme of intercultural dialogue.  Participants and the workshop leaders will travel to Cork on Sunday 1st May to showcase the work produced and to meet with fellow participants.  The aim of the workshops is to encourage young people from multi-cultural background to express themselves through hip hop music.  The celebration in Cork will take place in the newly redeveloped Triskel Christchurch building which opened to the public on 16th April 2011. 

Members of the ALF Ireland Network which took part in this project include The National Youth Council of Ireland, Song School, GMC, The Chester Beatty Library and Triskel Arts Centre.  This will be the first time these groups have worked together on a project.

For more information, please contact the Irish Network Coordinator: Mrs Ann Luttrell annluttrell(AT)triskelartscentre.ie

 

ALF Ireland Network Meeting 15 Feb. 2011 in Cork.

ALF Ireland Netwrok Mtg 15 Feb. 2011

The meeting of the Ireland Network took place at The River Lee Hotel in Cork City on Tue 15th February. This was the first regional meeting of the ALF Ireland Network and attracted a record number of attendees. Many of the participants travelled to Cork from other parts of the country and several people who are looking at becoming members in the future came mostly from Cork itself. Having Richard Shotton and Nancy Barrett from the UK ALF Network in attendance was particularly beneficial as representatives from the Ireland network were unable to attend the HoN mtg in Brussels in December because of severe weather conditions. Richard Shotton gave a detailed and thorough presentation on the meeting there and the discussions and conclusions that arose. There were lots of questions from attendees regarding the ALF strategy 2011-2014 and great interest in the upcoming campaign. Some of the attendees came up with campaign ideas during the meeting and planned to work together to further those ideas. They are looking forward to hearing final details of the campaign.

By having Richard and Nancy in attendance, we discovered that the ALF ireland and UK networks have much in common and are at a similar stage in their development. Both Triskel and Manchester University are relatively new HoNs and feel their mission is to try to consolidate their membership and encourage new ones. Lots of ideas were mooted in this regard. It was ultimately decided by the attendees that one idea - that of having a Facebook page for the Ireland Network - would not be a good idea for security reasons. The UK network is developing a web page for their members and have suggested that perhaps we could join forces on this. This was greeted by much enthusiasm by attendees and we hope that the UK network will also welcome the idea.

Stephen Spillane, a young Irish blogger reported back on his participation in the ALF Forum, and the conclusions from that forum. Also, the ALF Report on Intercultural Trends was discussed. The overall impression was that the conclusions of the Report - specifically the point that it was by meeting people from different countries and cultures that made a difference to attitudes. Thus it was felt that the Common Operation proposed for Ireland - involving young people from different parts of the country and from different cultural backgrounds - got much approval.

The plan is to bring young people from Belfast, Dublin and Cork together in an event titled 'Hip Hop to Cork' on Sunday May 1st. One of the Ireland network members will facilitate workshops on the theme of intercultural dialogue with three groups from the three different parts of the country during the months of March/April. The young people from Belfast and Dublin will then travel to Cork to showcase a hiphop activity arising from the workshops (for example - rapping, dancing, beatboxing). The venue for the workshops in Dublin will be the Chester Beatty Library (CBL is a network member and its library, located in Dublin Castle, has a hugely impressive collection from the great cultures and religions of the world). The young people will be asked to look at ways of responding to this collection. They will then be invited to discuss their findings in a session lead by the workshop facilitators. Many of these young people will have come to Ireland from other countries and most will never have travelled outside their home cities. Budget permitting, it is hoped to involve local Cork hiphop artists later on the same day to entertain the young people. We will have further details on the hiphop event in due course and would like to look at involving other network countries in similar events in the future. 

Newsletter March 2009

Welcome to our new ALF Ireland newsletter. We hope that the information provided is useful to our network members and welcome feedback and information for inclusion in future editions.

Please dowload the full newsletter here

Contents:

- ALF Ireland network survey
- ALF Ireland network meeting
- Head of Network (HoN) meeting, Nice
- ALF News
- Calls for Proposals
- NYCI DevEd workshop
- Arabic childrens’ books
- Teacher training resources
- Leading Schools Conference

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ALF IRL newsletter March 2009.pdf1.18 Mo