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Subversion and irony abound in works from the Crafts Council collection by Grayson Perry and others
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Ulster Youth Choir commemorate the outbreak of the First World War
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Nicholas Cage finds critical salvation in David Gordon Green's latest feature set in the rusted, dilapidated South
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The Austrian pianist and poet is a witty if laconic conversationalist at the Happy Days festival
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Ireland's leading drag queen delivers the Amnesty International Pride Lecture at The MAC in Belfast
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Michel Gondry's whimsical adaptation of the Boris Vian novel is a cocked-eyebrow of a film that never lets up
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Ulster Youth Orchestra perform music from Provofiev's great ballet and more at the Ulster Hall
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The life and legacy of guitarist John McLaughlin explored in Colin Harper's monumental new biography
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Andrew Lemon rounds up the latest releases from Boxcutter, Sister Ghost and TOSKA
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University of Ulster undergraduates exhibit glimpses of their artistic vision at SpaceCraft
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Emily Brontë's classical novel is adapted at Banbridge's Solitude Park
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Maureen Boyle attends a range of events at the International Summer School in Armagh
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Colin Geddis is ringmaster as the Crescent Arts Centre hosts a smorgasbord of Northern Irish comics
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An inventive contemporary musing on the fraught nexus between past and present at the Golden Thread Gallery
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France is smitten with nuclear energy, but not the workers, in this adaptation of Elisabeth Filhol's satirical novel
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Ulster Youth Training Choir gain valuable live performance experience at Craigavon Civic Centre
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National Theatre's star-studded current production to be streamed live into Queen's Film Theatre on August 3
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Andrew Farmer and Sons of Caliber ride the alt-folk wave with a debut album of highs and lows
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Mark McCambridge continues to impress with rich tunes and a hard-earned earthy croon
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Founders Cathal Breslin and Sabrina Hu lead the opening concert in Derry~Londonderry
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Guildhall Press invite a diverse range of writers to read in Derry~Londonderry
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... Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared lives up to its protracted title
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The Public Record Office celebrate the life and work of poet, activist and mentor John Hewitt
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Art rock trio Petomane craft a fine collection of pop tunes full of wit and graphic poetry
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Eamon O'Kane uses a derelict greenhouse in Denmark as a metaphor for man's desire to tame nature
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Charismatic anthropologist Henry Glassie returns to the County Fermanagh village where he made his name
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Jan Carson's debut novel is a magical realist adventure that fizzes with life
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Andrew Lemon reviews the latest releases from Michael Mormecha, Go Swim and Freak's
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1980s Texas is the backdrop to Jim Mickle's impressively pulpy adaptation of the Joe R Lansdale novel
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Political punk veterans mark two decades together with an energetic showing at the Mandela Hall
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Hard-rocking duo Paul Currie and Laura Totten keep smiling despite a disappointing turnout at the Oh Yeah Music Centre
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Paul Clements' biography of Richard Hayward reveals a forgotten renaissance man
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Chatterbox Productions enter the weird world of Victorian renaissance man Edward Lear at The MAC
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Barry Douglas's thunderously authoritative interpretation of the Austrian composer's final piano sonata
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Cellist and singer-songwriter exudes musicality at the Black Box
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Miriam de Búrca exposes societal divisions using folklore, draftsmanship and installation in Enniskillen
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Former Israeli soldier turned peace campaigner Yehuda Shaul speaks from the heart at the Black Box
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The inimitable architecture and food critic revels in language and sardonic wit at the Crescent Arts Centre
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Amma Asante tells the incredible true story of Miss Dido Belle Lindsay in this grandly realised sophomore feature
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16th Open House Festival continues with a celebration of blues and roots at the Empire Music Hall in Belfast
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Richard Gorman's meaningless abstract paintings with a Japanese bent leave Joanne Savage flabbergasted
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The extraordinary story of one intrepid Polish father, soldier, tailor arrives at the Lyric Theatre
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Ryan Coogler's searing directorial debut screens in Belfast as part of Community Relations Week
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Felicity McCall bravely tackles the subject of child abuse in this compelling but disturbing novella
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New literary journal launches at the Black Box in Belfast with readings from featured writers
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Party-poppers The Wonder Villains' long-awaited debut fizzes with youthful energy and delivers on live reputation
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Having sold out in record time, this touring show is an interesting diversion from the ongoing series
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Pearse Elliott's latest work is an entertaining if unwieldy beast set in the border area of post-Celtic Tiger Ireland
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The current exhibition at the Ulster Museum inspires a day of discourse from a variety of speakers
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The boundaries between fact and fiction are blurred in Roman Polanski's amusing adaptation of the David Ives play
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Former fabric designer Kevin Collins paints a 'delicate and luminous' version of Northern Ireland under the stars
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A literate and uplifting performance at the Real Music Club from Willy Vlautin and Co
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Madness frontman turned touring raconteur recalls an extraordinary life well lived at the Ulster Hall
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John Turturro writes and directs this refined and stylish comedy starring Woody Allen and Sofia Vergara
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What was supposed to be Ken Loach's final film – an overly theatrical adaptation of the play by Donal O'Kelly – is no great legacy
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Michael Doherty and John Stewart present two very different visions of Belfast at An Culturlann
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Guillermo Calderón's rumination on a damaged Chile feels familiar in post-conflict Belfast
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Andrew Lemon appraises the latest releases from Empty Lungs, Tied to Machines and UNKNWN
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John Higgins visits the Ulster Museum as an unusual collection from the British Museum packs up for Hull
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American conservative satirist holds court on the baby boom generation at Ulster Museum for the Hay Festival of Literature
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