It's not clear how you intend it to work, but in any case it probably won't work like you're thinking.
You could get a few milliradians of rotation around a remote center, provided that you arranged to slide the three elements relative to one another, and greased the sliding surfaces of course. That would work, except that your clearances are all wrong; the internal arc has to be shorter than the outer arc of each sliding pair, in order to allow the sliding to take place.
You could get a few degrees of rotation about a center within the pictured assembly, if the inner arc were actually smaller than the outer arc, so the inner arc would roll on the outer arc. There would need to be some kind of elastic tension arrangement near the hole to hold the stack together.
As drawn, you could get a few degrees of rotation of the parts about a center within the assembly, with the complication that the left and right rotations would be about centers displaced from the hole. I.e. the centers for rotation, four in all, would lie along lines perpendicular to plane of the image at the ends of the longer arc. Again, rotation would require an elastic tension member holding the assembly together.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA