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Galway Bay FM
30 April 2021
Galway Bay fm newsroom – This year’s Galway International Arts Festival has been postponed until Autumn.
The event – which usually runs in July – has been pushed back due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.
Organisers hope the new date will allow for the successful rollout of the vaccination programme.
However, the popular Big Top venue and all associated acts are being postponed until July 2022.
Ticket holders are advised to hold onto their tickets, which will be valid for next year.
The new dates for the 2021 Galway International Arts Festival are August 28th until September 18th – with a full programme to be released in June.
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By Daisy Carrington, Contributor
Ireland’s changing. Fast. Where once the country stirred up images of threadbare tweed jackets, alcoholism and an omnipotent church, Ireland has become the new Land of Opportunity. Nowhere is the change more apparent than in Galway, the heart of Ireland’s west and, once a year, host of the country’s largest arts festival.
“In the late ’80s, unemployment was at 20 percent, inflation was at 20 percent, interest rates were at 20 percent,” claims John Concannon, the Chief Executive at Ireland West Tourism, “and there were absolutely no job prospects. When people came out of school, everyone went to New York or London, because there was absolutely nothing happening.” These facts of a former Ireland are well known. Our image of Ireland has been shaped by the artists who’ve made them known. James Joyce revealed to us the strength of Catholic guilt, Frank McCourt the pervasiveness of poverty on the Emerald Isle. What is lesser known are th