Once Upon A Sound with Yvonne McGuinness & Andrew Clancy, hosted by Dónal Dineen
Tickets €15 ( Dancing till late included)
Dónal’s guests include: Irish Artist Yvonne McGuinness & Architect Andrew Clancy, Clancy Moore Architects.
Dancing till late >>>
Ticket holders are invited to join us later as we continue into the night with dancing till late!
Tickets €10 on the door.
>> Doors from 10pm
Dónal Dineen is an Irish DJ, radio presenter and film maker. A pioneering force for a generation of music fans, Donal is renowned for his deep passion for music as well as a curator of unique multi-disciplinary events. Current projects include the music podcast Make Me An Island podcast and a documentary film Dance to Remember which will premiere at the Kerry Film Festival in October.
Dónal will be hosting a special live edition of his Once Upon A Sound video series at AATE where he’ll be exploring music as a source of inspiration for creative minds working in other media.
Taking our cue from the Desert Island Discs programme first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1942, guests will be invited to choose a selection of audio recordings that they would take with them if they were to be cast away on a desert island as a jump-off point for a discussion about the role sound plays in their practice.
Guest speakers;
Andrew Clancy: Is a director of Clancy Moore Architects, a practice he founded with Colm Moore in 2008. He is full Professor of Architecture in the Kingston School of Art, a role he has held since 2018, and where he directs Register - a research group concerned with the fullest range of architectural practice. Since 2023 is has acted as visiting Professor to the Accademia di Architettura Mendrisio, and was Visiting Professor at the Arkitektskolen Aarhus, Denmark in 2015. He has examined and been a guest critic in a wide range of schools including ETH; HKU; EPFL; TUM; AHO; AA; London Met and TU Dublin. He frequently writes critically about architecture, and has co-authored a book on the innovative housing work of the Danish Architect Kay Fisker, and acted as guest editor of the Japanese publication A+U on three occasions. He has a PhD from RMIT and is a member of the Royal Institute of Architects of Ireland. He is a board member of the Irish Arts Council / An Comhairle Ealíon.
Yvonne McGuinness is a visual artist and filmmaker whose work critically examines place, belonging, and social dynamics within environments. Through performance-based films and installations, often created in collaboration with communities, she explores collective histories and identities. What’s Left Us Then, supported by the Arts Council, toured nationally and presented a poetic, feminist investigation of rural Irish concrete architecture. McGuinness’s interdisciplinary practice embraces chance and layered narratives, rigorously exploring the boundaries between documentary and performance.
