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      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper encodinganalog="title">*Dance Strokes I – Images of Nijinsky*</titleproper>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="publisher">National Dance Archive of Ireland</publisher>
        <address>
          <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
          <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
        </address>
        <date normal="2024-03-25" encodinganalog="date">2024-03-25</date>
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      <langusage>
        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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      <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">*Dance Strokes I – Images of Nijinsky*</unittitle>
      <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135 NDAI">N7/1/2/5</unitid>
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      <repository>
        <corpname>National Dance Archive of Ireland</corpname>
        <address>
          <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
          <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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      <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
        <persname id="atom_9313_actor">Quilligan, Fiona (b. 1958), dancer and choreographer</persname>
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      <note>
        <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
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      <p>Material relating to *Dance Strokes I – Images of Nijinsky*, a dance work created by Rubato Ballet in 1990.</p>
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      <p>The material has been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Invitation to the opening of an exhibition</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135 NDAI">N7/1/2/5/1</unitid>
          <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">N7/10</unitid>
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            <persname id="atom_9316_actor">Quilligan, Fiona (b. 1958), dancer and choreographer</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
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          <p>Invitation to the official opening by Raymond Keaveney, Director of the National Gallery of an exhibition entitled *Dance Strokes – The Artist and the Dancer* at the RHA Gallagher Gallery, Ely Place, Dublin on 4 October 1990.  The exhibition accompanied Rubato Ballet’s performance of *Dance Strokes I – Images of Nijinsky* and was curated by Fiona Quilligan.</p>
        </scopecontent>
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        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Fiona Quilligan in a scene from *Images of Nijinsky*</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135 NDAI">N7/1/2/5/2</unitid>
          <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">N7/16</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1990-01-01/1990-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1990?]</unitdate>
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            <persname id="atom_9319_actor">Quilligan, Fiona (b. 1958), dancer and choreographer</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
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          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Black and white photograph by Tom Lawlor, printed onto an A4 card, of Fiona Quilligan in a scene from *Images of Nijinsky*, inspired by Nijinsky’s diary entry ‘When I was a boy my father wanted to teach me to swim, he threw me into the water, I fell and sank to the bottom.’</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of a scene from *Images of Nijinsky*</unittitle>
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          <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">N7/17</unitid>
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            <persname id="atom_9322_actor">Quilligan, Fiona (b. 1958), dancer and choreographer</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
          </note>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Black and white photograph by Tom Lawlor of Fiona Quilligan and Barry Murray in a scene from *Images of Nijinsky*, inspired by Nijinsky’s diary entry ‘I ran away from home as my wife did not understand me.  She got frightened of me &amp; I got frightened of her.’</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of a duet from *Images of Nijinsky*</unittitle>
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          <note>
            <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Black and white photograph by Tom Lawlor of Zelda Francesca and Barry Murray in a duet from *Images of Nijinsky*.</p>
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            <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
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          <p>Colour photograph by Tom Lawlor pasted onto a sheet of black card of Zelda Francesca and Barry Murray in a scene from *Images of Nijinsky* in front of a commissioned painting by Micheal Mulcahy.</p>
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          <note>
            <p>Fiona Quilligan was born in Dublin and studied dance at Dun Laoghaire College of Art and the London School of Contemporary Dance.  She performed with Dublin City Ballet before founding Rubato Ballet in 1986.  Her vision for this collective of professional dance artists was to create new Irish dance works and to pioneer links with related art disciplines, such as music, art, poetry and sculpture.  The company achieved high critical acclaim both in Ireland and abroad and was the recipient of the Nijinsky Medal from the Polish Artists Agency Warsaw (1990), the AIB Better Ireland Award for Arts and Culture (1992), and the ESB Environmental Awareness Award (1999).<lb/><lb/>In 1992, the company founded Rubato Community Arts Project in association with FÁS, which employed 14 artists to provide experiences of dance, music and painting for primary and secondary school children and to establish a role for artists in the community.  Rubato Ballet was wound down in 2003, and a year later Quilligan continued her career as a freelance choreographer.  More information on Fiona Quilligan and Rubato Ballet can be found at https://www.fionaquilligan.info/.</p>
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          <p>Two colour photographs printed onto an A4 card of Zelda Francesca (top); and of Zelda Francesca with Barry Murray (bottom) in a scene from *Images of Nijinsky* in front of a commissioned painting by Micheal Murray.</p>
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