Moving Earth - Eco Dance Day 14th of June, 2025

Eco Film Screening Programme

Where: Egg Room at Interface Inagh, 1pm - 6pm

 

Scroll down for more information on movies and artists' biographies. 

 

Em-BOG-iment - film by Ailbhe Wheatly & Tony Whelan

Em-BOG-iment is a collaboration between artist Ailbhe Wheatley and Tony Whelan of Canola Pictures.

Em-BOG-iment is a poetry performance filmed on-site in the wilds of East Clare, Ireland. It documents a personal and collective remembering through playful interaction with the Irish landscape. It is a story of what it means to sink, drop and descend in a society that often seeks to escape.

Bowland Beth - film by Vidda Le Feber & Catherine Seymour

Bowland Beth, a film by Vidda Le Feber & Catherine Seymour

 

Ten years ago the extraordinary bird of prey, the Hen Harrier, was virtually extinct in England due to illegal persecution. It is still under the same threat today.

The inspiration for our film is the searing, tender poem, Bowland Beth, by David Harsent, his elegy to a Hen Harrier, Beth, birthed on the wild moors of the Forest of Bowland, Lancashire and shot

before she could breed. His own reading forms the heart of the film, embedded in Rob Godman’s specially composed and haunting soundscore.

Featuring dancer Zoe Arshamian amid the landscape of Bowland itself, our film bears witness to

the sky dancing beauty of Hen Harriers in flight and the mindless cruelty of their unwarranted persecution.

Filleadh - Return, film by Zoë Uí Fhaoláin Green

Filleadh - Return

by Zoë Uí Fhaoláin Green

This film explores the world through the eyes of lichen, and questions what we as humans can learn from them, their deeply slow growth habits and their state of ultra-symbiosis.

Liguid Spine: Augusta - film by Katie Pustizzi

The dance film, Liquid Spine, Augusta, highlights the environmental and health challenges of the region known as "The Black Triangle" in Sicily due to seaside industry.

Photo Credit: Lorenzo Panebianco

Nothing Exists Until it Moves - film by Sophie Hutchinson & Billy Kemp

Nothing Exists Until It Moves is short film which uses a computer-vision technique called

frame differencing to extract and emphasise all movement within a moving image. A body

encounters an unseen environment, revealed only through its disturbance. The earth shifts,

stones scatter, and bushes tremble toward consciousness, unveiling the subtle violence of

existence.

The screen becomes a space where movement alone defines existence, blurring the line

between body and environment. A movement study in transformation, presence, and the

unseen forces that shape what we perceive.

Gaineamh ag Sleamhnú by Bernadette Divilly

‘Gaineamh ag Sleamhnú’

This video is composed from material using 9 minute dance scores influenced by the work of Barbara Dilley, USA (www.barbaradilley.com/)

Drawing from my own research Bígí ag Damhsa, engaging with Contemplative Dance Practice and collaborating with other artists this video evolved from composing with material generated during a research period focused on Language, Landscape and the Body on Inis Oírr. Most significantly a poem entitled ‘Sand’ (www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWcOfJ1Fm4I), written by myself and translated by Maire Ui Mhaolain is part of the soundtrack that holds and connects a collage of movement work. The essence of the work is translation of experience between bodies and space with a focus on language and place.

Performers/researchers: Bernadette Divilly, Siobhán Ni Dhuinnin

Translation: Maire Ui Mhaolain

Videography/Photography/Soundscores: Cormac Coyne

Funded and supported by the Arts Council, Áras Éanna Arts Centre, Galway Dance, Galway City Council and Galway County Council

 

Biographies of Film Artists

Ailbhe Wheatley is a writer and visual artist from County Clare. Her work explores themes of embodiment and interrelationship through poetry, performance and painting. More about her work can be found at www.albalanna.com.

Katie Pustizzi, MFA (she/her) is an Interdisciplinary Movement Artist in the greater Boston area. She is the Director of Liquid Spine, a global dance series that explores the needs of our water systems through the lens of ecology and conservation.  Katie is deeply interested in international exchange as a form of artistic research and connection.  Her research, teaching, and performance has taken her across the globe. Most recently, she created the dance film "Liquid Spine, Augusta" in Sicily. She also curates the work of international screendance artists through Liquid Spine's FOR THIS EARTH - Screendance Festival. Katie is currently on faculty at Dean College, Endicott College, and Boston University, where she teaches contemporary and improvisational movement forms

Zoë Uí Fhaoláin Green is a visual artist with a collaborative and socially engaged practice; using natural materials, found objects, performance, film and sound recording to connect with place.

She co-designs and facilitates creative environmental projects to encourage nature connection, empathy, and playful curiosity in both children and adults.

Sophie Hutchinson and Billy Kemp are a collaborative duo from the West of Ireland. Drawing on their

backgrounds in contemporary dance, sonic, visual and digital art. Their practice explores the dynamic

interplay of these disciplines, delving into themes of nature, connection, elemental forces, and the sensory

experience of place. Through their audio-visual creations, they invite audiences to engage with the

landscapes and ideas that inspire their work.

Sophie Hutchinson is a dance artist and movement practitioner from Waterford, now based in the west

of Ireland. Her work spans performance, film, and site-specific practices. She collaborates with musicians, filmmakers, poets, and visual artists to create interdisciplinary projects that explore rhythm, dissonance, and the integration of movement with sound and visual media.

This year, she is developing a new project with Surface Area Dance Theatre (UK) in collaboration with Deaf visual artist and writer Louise Stern, in partnership with Dance Limerick. The project is supported by an Arts Council of Ireland Bursary Award. The landscapes of the Burren, in County Clare, where Sophie was based for the past three years, have deeply influenced her creative practice

Catherine Seymour is a Devon based choreographer and writer. This most recent collaboration

with film maker Vidda Le Feber, Bowland Beth, explores the threat to the endangered bird of prey,

the Hen Harrier. It was exhibited as a Screendance installation at Harbour House Gallery,

Kingsbridge, Devon, Feb-March 2024. Further screenings include, Hen Harrier Action’s, Skydancer

Day, May 2024, Exeter Dance International Film Festival, Oct 2024. Fisheye Film Festival, High

Wycombe, Nature & Culture Poetry and Film Festival, Copenhagen, and Birmingham International

Art Film Festival, 2023. Their first film, We Who Stood Upon This Place, was shown in Watch This Space, Dartington, Devon Mar 2019. After training at London Contemporary Dance School and the Merce Cunningham studio, she

performed with Plesni Teater Ljubljana and Nightshift Dance Theatre. Early live dance and dance

theatre works were presented within seasons at The Place Theatre, London and UK touring.

Choreographic residencies include The Royal Festival Hall, London, Dance Base, Edinburgh and,

with the Kreutzer String Quartet, at Chelsea Royal Hospital and Lauderdale House. She has been

a visiting lecturer at Middlesex University and on the faculty at the Scottish School of

Contemporary Dance.

As a poet (Catherine Edwards) she is published as a finalist in the current LISP (London

Independent Story Prize) Flash Fiction and Poetry Anthology 2024 and is performing with Wild

Words, Nature Poetry Project Plymouth, May 2025.

Bernadette Divilly is a dance movement artist using socially-engaged practices centred on the body-mind relationship, practising in the West of Ireland. She advocates, along with a growing number of international practitioners, for the intelligence of the body as central to politics, governance and working with conflict.

Dance movement is central to Bernadette's understanding of what it means to be at home – to be human on a shared planet where sentient bodies are connected and resonate within a physical world. Body, mind and spirit are experienced through the template of the physical body. Movement is a shared language for all life, a language of creation.

Her practice is based on depth psychology and somatic studies. She uses contemplative dance and collaborative arts practices to bridge and connect the private and public realms and to creatively develop new understandings of landscape, culture, migration, health and the body.

Photo Credit: Elodie Rein