Epicentric is a neologism that comes from the fusion of the terms Epicenter and Eccentric.
Epicentro:
In seismology, the area of the earth’s surface where an earthquake occurs with maximum intensity: it surrounds the point (epicenter proper) located on the earth’s radius that passes through the earthquake’s hypocenter;
By extension, the center from which an epidemic or insurgent movement, ideology and the like spreads.
Eccentric:
Two circles contained within each other, but with different centers;
In mechanics organ in the form of a circular disk, revolving about an axis normal to the plane of the disk and not passing through its center, coupled with two contiguous members (connecting rod and frame), with which it forms a rotoidal pair, serves to transform the rotary motion of the disk into the reciprocating rectilinear motion of the rod connected with the connecting rod;
In ancient Ptolemaic astronomy, auxiliary circle employed to explain the motion of the planets around the Earth;
In volcanology, eccentric crater, eruptive mouth that opens at some distance from the central apparatus of a volcano, connected to it, however, in depth.
Epicentric sees the theater as the epicenter of a telluric shock that stirs people, shaking them up by provoking the need to become culturally and socially active.
A tremor that collapses the walls of the theater and takes it outside, into the streets, which makes its interior visible even from the outside, like a house dismembered by an earthquake. A positive earthquake in which people can approach the theater and look at it from inside, from behind, and discover it – perhaps for the first time.
An eccentric project: with multiple centers and decentralized because it involves multiple centers, including smaller towns that often remain excluded and undervalued. Which has an eccentric crater in the Slovenian-Italian Goritian, connected with the rest of the Epicentric project.