Dunlavin will come alive this weekend,
writes Brian Byrne, as the
Dunlavin Arts Festival brings music, storytelling, exhibitions, film, workshops and community celebration to venues across the town.
The festival opens with a Thursday prelude featuring the Lámh ‘Finding Your Voice’ Choir with Baltinglass Sings, followed by an evening of words and music at St Nicholas Church. From Friday, the programme expands across Dunlavin with exhibitions opening in multiple locations, an official festival launch at the Old School House Gallery, and a line dancing social night at Imaal Hall.
Saturday offers one of the busiest programmes of the weekend, with an inclusive community warm-up, storytelling and creative workshops, puppet shows, live drumming, brass music and experimental cinema. Highlights include illustrator PJ Lynch’s Drawing Gulliver!, biologist Éanna Ní Lamhna’s midsummer nature talk, and a local history discussion on the 1921 Milltown Murder. The day culminates in the return of the Cailleachs and Vizzards parade and céilí, reviving a distinctive West Wicklow tradition of masked performance.
Music is also central to the festival, with Midsummer Musical Melodies on Saturday evening featuring soprano Niamh Murray, Ronan Byrne, the Gormanstown Choir and the Dara String Quartet.
On Sunday, festivalgoers can begin before dawn with Ancestral Dawning, a first-light gathering at Tornant Moate combining voice performance, landscape and juggling. The day continues with exhibitions, craft fair stalls, plein air painting, seed bomb workshops, drumming and the Maypole ritual in the Midsummer Garden.
Throughout the weekend, audiences can explore exhibitions by local and visiting artists, including the Wicklow Hills Arts Collective, Cruthú Art Collective, Redline Art Group and others, alongside special installations and community art projects. With much of the programme rooted in place, heritage and participation, this year’s Dunlavin Arts Festival promises a vibrant midsummer celebration of creativity in West Wicklow.
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