Oerol Festival
Arthur Kentie has extensive experience across various roles and industries spanning several decades. Currently serving as Teamleider at Oerol since 2005, Arthur handles technical tasks under pressure during the festival's setup phase. Simultaneously, Arthur has been a Skileraar and recruiter at Top Skischule Ellmau in Austria since December 2000, bridging Dutch ski instructors with the Austrian management. Prior to these roles, Arthur worked as a Ontwikkelingswerker at Sarakasi from 2006 to 2015, empowering young adults in Nairobi's slums, and as a Reisleider at Terra Travel, providing memorable experiences for travelers in Africa from 2001 to 2015. Arthur also held the role of Commercieel-technisch directeur at Apparatenfabriek Kentie Bv for 18 years, successfully managing customer relations and internal operations. Earlier experience includes leadership positions at Correct Electronics and cetonor, as well as military training with the Koninklijke Landmacht. Arthur's education includes studies at the Instituut voor Bedrijfs Wetenschappen and the Instituut voor Sociale Wetenschappen.
This person is not in any teams
Oerol Festival
Every June, the island of Terschelling in the Wadden Sea is transformed for ten days into a unique natural stage for theatre, dance, art installations and music. More recent projects display a combination of arts, science and nature. These projects are becoming more and more important, shaping new aspirations of the festival. With a huge audience participating as fieldworkers in laboratory projects the festival becomes a fun but serious living lab. At Oerol new perspectives on society, nature and culture can be explored, by addressing how people move and behave within their surroundings. The shows and lab-projects where mankind and nature meet one another are created for the specific locations in which they take place. From a theatre spectacle to acrobatics and interactive installations: you will find all of this and more in the dunes, on the beaches, in the woods, on the dikes, in sheds or barns and simply in the streets of Terschelling.