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Dublin - Event Notice
Thursday January 01 1970

Miró Theatre Production at IMMA

category dublin | arts and media | event notice author Tuesday July 04, 2006 16:34author by pat c

The work of the great Spanish surrealist artist Joan Miró will be brought vividly to life in a spectacular open-air theatre production at the Irish Museum of Modern Art at 3.00pm on Saturday 15 July 2006. Merma Neverdies, a colourful and entertaining critique of the abuse of power, draws on the Catalan tradition of street parades in a visually striking production for audiences of all ages. The play features a series of grotesque characters in the form of larger-than-life puppets, which are exact replicas of those created by Miró for his original production in 1978. Admission to the performance is free.

The production is being staged in the magnificent grounds and courtyard at IMMA for one performance only, as part of IMMA’s 15th anniversary celebrations. It is being presented by the renowned Elsinor Theatre Company of Barcelona – led by the distinguished Catalan director Joan Baixas – complete with their own street band. It was shown for the first time in over 25 years at Tate Modern in May 2006.

Merma Neverdies follows the adventures, and misadventures, of the tyrannical Merma, along with those of the Woman (Mrs Merma) and Merma’s Ministers – Priest Chives, Captain Doghead and Marquis Ofthepumpkin – the Horse and several other supernumeraries. These assorted characters range from giants with monstrous heads and six-foot-long arms to small timid creatures that whisper and squeal, with the entire spectacle looking as if Miró’s famous freeform shapes had suddenly come to life.

In its ridiculing of the absurd behaviour of the despotic Merma and his entourage, Merma Neverdies evokes the spirit of Miró’s production, Mori el Merma (Death to Merma), which was first presented just three years after the death of Francisco Franco in 1975. This in turn was inspired by the French writer Alfred Jarry’s famous burlesque farce Ubu Roi, in which Jarry attached the abuse of power as personified by the despotic Ubu. Joan Miró became fascinated by the character of Ubu in the 1920s, resulting in an extensive series of lithographs and several sculptures. But it was when he began to associate Ubu with the dictatorship in Spain that his views found their most complete expression in the form of Mori el Merma.

Elsinor Theatre Company has been presenting cultural events, festivals and spectacles for the past 15 years, working with such distinguished directors as Peter Greenaway, Calixto Bieito and Peter Brook. Joan Baixas is a noted director, dramatist and painter, who has worked with artists, theatre companies and festivals throughout the world for over thirty years. His collaboration with Joan Miró goes back to 1978 when his company Teatre de la Claca worked with Miró on the first production of Mori el Merma in the prestigious Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona and in Paris, London, Rome and Sydney. He is particularly interested in the production at IMMA, as it returns Merma to Miró’s original concept of street/outdoor theatre.

Museum Entrance on Military Road

By bus: Buses to Heuston Station (5 minutes walk via Military Rd): 26 from Wellington Quay; 51, 79 from Aston Quay; 90 Dart Feeder Bus from Connolly and tara Street Stations to Heuston Station.

Buses to James St (5 minutes walk via steps to Bow Lane onto Irwin St and Military Rd): 123 from O’Connell St/Dame St; 51B, 78A from Aston Quay.

By car: 10 minute drive from city centre. Unlimited free car parking.

On foot: Approximately 30 to 40 minutes from city centre.

By train: 5 minute walk from Heuston Station; from Connolly and tara Street Stations by 90 bus to Heuston Station

By Luas: Red line to Heuston Station, 5 minute walk to Museum entrance on Military Road.


Related Link: http://www.imma.ie

Comments (3 of 3)

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author by pat cpublication date Tue Jul 04, 2006 16:38author address author phone

Flyer

IMMA, Merma Neverdies
IMMA, Merma Neverdies

author by tierra lluirepublication date Wed Jul 05, 2006 00:51author address author phone

thats why you can't write his name properly Pat - coz your keyboard doesn't do the accent.

author by pat cpublication date Thu Jul 06, 2006 15:02author address author phone

I cant even do the Spanish accent properly let alone the Catalan.

The present Director of IMMA, Enrique Juncosa is a grand nephew of Miró. Heres a brief profile.

Born in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, in 1961, Enrique Juncosa was Deputy Director of the prestigious Reina Sofia National Museum of Modern Art (MNCARS) in Madrid from 2000 until taking up the post of Director of IMMA in February 2003.

Prior to his time at MNCARS, Mr Juncosa was Deputy Director of the highly-regarded Institute of Modern Art in Valencia (IVAM). From 1992 to 1998 he was visual art critic for El País, Spain’s most prestigious and largest-circulation daily newspaper. During this time he also worked as a freelance curator for shows by artists such as Barry Flanagan, Malcolm Morley and Miquel Barceló - in Spain and France and also in Germany, the UK and Norway. Mr Juncosa is also a noted poet, having had five books of poetry published in Spain.



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