Drink & Draw: The Brigit Edition

This event has ended

The Grand Social, Saturday 3rd February

Music and madness, drinking and drawing – join us for an art party to remember! Hosted by Drink and Draw Ireland, channel your inner artist and create a beautiful Brigit-themed masterpiece to take home and hang on your wall.

Absolutely no painting experience is necessary, and our instructor will guide you step by step through the painting process…or you can let the brushes guide you and do your own thing!

Presented in partnership with Alternative Dublin as part of Brigit: Dublin City Celebrating Women, a Dublin City Council initiative.


Date:
Saturday 3rd February
Time:
4.00pm & 7.00pm
Price:
€25
Address:
The Grand Social, Liffey Street Lower, North City, Dublin 1, Ireland

Google Map of The Grand Social, Liffey Street Lower, North City, Dublin 1, Ireland

You might also like...

What's on

Bealtaine Festival

Various Locations

The 2026 Bealtaine Festival, Ireland’s national celebration of creativity in older age (run by Age & Opportunity), takes place throughout May with events nationwide. It features a diverse mix of arts, film, performance, and community engagement, promoting the artistic contributions of older people. Proudly funded by the Arts Council and the HSE, with the support of communities nationwide and a vast network of accomplished local and national bodies.

What's on

Dublin Dance Festival

Various Locations

Dublin Dance Festival brings artists and audiences together, live and virtually, to create and share exceptional, provocative and relevant dance experiences. The Dublin Dance Festival believes in the power of dance to move, connect and inspire change. With so much of Ireland’s culture tied up in language and the past, dance has a unique power to explore and express what it is to be human, right now.

What's on

Wilde Stages, Dublin’s Queer Theatre Festival

Various Locations

The Wilde Stages Festival (formerly the International Dublin Gay Theatre Festival) is an annual event, celebrating the contribution of LGBTQIA+ people to the theatre, past and present. The Festival was founded in 2004 to mark the 150th anniversary of the birth of Oscar Wilde, in his native city. With an emphasis on new or recent international and Irish works with a broadly LGBTQ+ theme or relevance, the Festival has grown to become the largest event of its type in the world. The Festival creates new opportunities for visibility and affirmation for existing and emerging gay artists and th