How many ways are there to play the guitar? How far can the boundaries of experiment and improvisation reach? Where to go next from the European tradition, the grand concert halls, and the order of the triadic harmony?
Marek Kundlák and private art school Ateliér SK

Marek Kundlák (1981) studied theatre dramaturgy and works across a wide spectrum of artistic expression – from writing librettos, texts, and translations to theatre dramaturgy and directing, performing, composing music for theatre, film, and concert settings, playing experimental instruments, as well as cooking, gardening, and woodworking. He has created and performed in Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Hungary, and Italy. He has worked with the Opera of the Slovak National Theatre and is currently a music dramaturg for spoken-word programming at Slovak Radio.


performative concert

Factor(h)ry

The title Facto(h)ry plays on words and can be loosely translated as games in a factory. The factory lies deserted, barely recalling the cacophony of sounds that once brought it to life day after day. Machines, people, weather – everything once resonated within like a symphony. What could be more adventurous for youngsters than to explore an old factory and discover how it sounds? The children bring along instruments of their own making, built from construction materials; just as they’ve given new life to plastic pipes or metal bins, they now attempt to reawaken the remnants of the inventory and the long-abandoned spaces of the factory.

The concert forms part of the Tuning the City project, through which the ooo collective collaborates with elementary art schools in the Trenčín region in 2025–2026 to foster creative approaches to music education. Together with the pupils of these schools, they are preparing a large-scale participatory sound performance to be held on 22 May 2026 in Trenčín.

The pssst series is part of the project New New Music, which is included in Trenčín 2026. Trenčín 2026 is financially supported by the City of Trenčín, the Trenčín Self-Governing Region, and the Ministry of Culture of the Slovak Republic. In partnership with the European Union.