York Festival of Ideas is a cultural festival in York which runs for two weeks every year in June. Launched in 2011 as a partnership between the University of York and major cultural organisations in the city including York Theatre Royal, York Museums Trust, the National Centre for Early Music and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, it has since expanded to incorporate many more organisations not only from around the city but also from across the UK. [1]
It is one of the largest free festivals of its kind in the UK. [2]
Every year the festival offers speakers, exhibitions, performances, guided tours and family-friendly activities, with topics ranging from history to politics to psychology and many more. On average the Festival attracts over 40,000 people each year.[3]
Festivals
2011 – Beckett, the Body and the Bible
The 2011 pilot festival consisted of over 20 events across the city of York.[4] The themes for the first Festival were Beckett, the Body and the Bible.[5] The Festival included events with two novelists powerfully influenced by Beckett's work – John Banville and the Nobel Laureate JM Coetzee, in addition to theatre performances by the internationally renowned Gare St Lazare Players.The Festival of Ideas in 2011 was a partnership between the University of York, York Theatre Royal, The National Centre for Early Music[4] and York Museums Trust.[6]
2012 – Metamorphoses
The overarching theme for the 2012 Festival was Metamorphoses,[7] which included major topic areas such as the perils and perceptions of ageing; how conflict transforms lives; architecture as a catalyst for social, cultural and economic progress, and the turbulence of financial markets. The programme also included a Science out of the Lab event in the city centre; a New Writers’ Day; a variety of exhibitions, musical performances and concerts, and international speakers such as Anthony Horowitz and Jung Chang.[8]
2013 – North and South
York Festival of Ideas 2013 was organised around the theme North and South. Celebrating York's status as 'capital of the North', the Festival explored, questioned and celebrated ideas of 'North', both as a stand-alone idea, and in direct comparison with ideas of 'South'. Festival events explored ideas of cultural identity, health, food, women, technology and architecture.[9]
The programme provided a wide variety of events including debates as part of BBC Radio 3's Free Thinking Festival;[10] a New Writers’ day with Granta Magazine's Best of Young British Novelists List; Festival Focus days on architecture and design and the economy; a variety of exhibitions, musical performances from national and international performers, hands-on activities and workshops,[11] and headline addresses by speakers such as Melvyn Bragg, Heidi Thomas, Brian Sewell, William Sitwell, Michael Wood, Ross Noble,[12]Michael Scott, Zoe Williams, Harriet Sergeant and Seamus Heaney, in what was one of his last public appearances before his death.[13]
In addition, the University of York and the York Festival of Ideas hosted the Royal Academy of Engineering Summer Soiree Exhibition on 27 June attended by the Princess Royal, in her capacity as Patron of the Royal Academy of Engineering.[14] This included a major exhibition entitled, Engineering: Design for Living, which showcased research across a range of disciplines from literature and advances in computer science, to the emergence of 'personalised' medicine, to demonstrate the way in which engineering ingenuity has and is influencing and improving the way in which we live our lives.[15]
York Festival of Ideas was shortlisted for the Times Higher Education Awards 2013.[18]
2014 – Order and Chaos
The 2014 Festival theme Order and Chaos provided subjects including arts and society, conflict and resolution, the future of food, maps and exploration, healthcare, science and religion, economic growth, the ancient world and the mysteries of our brain.[19]
The programme provided a wide variety of events including panel debates on the world's response to global crises, and on detective writing; Festival Focus days on economic growth, religion and science, the future of food, and detective writing; a variety of exhibitions, musical and theatrical performances from national and international performers, hands-on activities and workshops,[20] and headline addresses by speakers such as Jung Chang, Michael Morpurgo,[21]Anthony Horowitz, Charlie Higson, Hermione Lee, James Rubin, and Gavin Esler.
More than 150 events were delivered under the 2015 Festival theme Secrets and Discoveries between 9 and 21 June.[25] 45 organisations [26] co-delivered events under the Festival of Ideas banner in 50 venues.[27] These included Waterstones, Joseph Rowntree Society, Bettys, York Minster, National Railway Museum, York Museums Trust and National Centre for Early Music.[28] The events encompassed art and design, the economy and equality, food and health, performance and poetry, the past and the future, security and surveillance, truth and trust, technology and the environment, and much more.[29] Headline speakers included Michael Morpurgo, Sir Christopher Frayling, Claire Wilcox, Andrew Davies, Richard Davies, Polly Toynbee, and Peter Murray. Festival Focus days focused on the sub-themes of Curiouser and Curiouser, The Future of Food, The Future of Democracy and Economic Growth, and Surveillance, Snowden and Security.[30]
The 2017 York Festival of Ideas took place from 6 to 18 June with the theme The Story of Things in celebration of human ingenuity and invention.[37]
Headline speakers included Peter Lord, Co-founder and Creative Director of Aardman, cleric and broadcaster Reverend Richard Coles, former Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls, and children's author and poet Michael Rosen. This festival also included an episode of BBC Radio 3's New Generation Thinkers as parts of the festival's launch night.[38]
2018 – Imagining the Impossible
The 2018 York Festival of Ideas took place from 5 to 17 June under the overarching banner of Imagining the Impossible.[39]
The festival hosted one of the BBC's annual Reith Lectures for BBC Radio 4 with historian Margaret MacMillan on the subject of gender and warfare.
The festival focus days revolved around the topics of The Future of UK Higher Education, Achieving Peace in the Middle East and A Date with History: Imagining Revolutions, as well as there being a Harry Potter-inspired Witchcraft and Wizardry day of events for families.[40]
2019 – A World of Wonder
The 2019 York Festival of Ideas took place from 4 to 16 June under the banner of A World of Wonder.[41]
Speakers included the film director Mike Leigh speaking about his film, Peterloo, Debbie Horsfield, the BAFTA award winning writer of the BBC’s Poldark, and journalist Gavin Esler. Festival focus topics included What have universities ever done for us? and Artificial Intelligence: Looking to the future.[42]
2020 – Virtual Horizons
York Festival of Ideas for 2020 was due to be held as normal from 2–14 June 2020.
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, the festival was relaunched as the York Festival of Ideas 2020 online running instead under the banner of Virtual Horizons.[43] Despite the solely online format, the festival was still able to offer a wide variety of events ranging from concerts to poetry workshops to puzzles in the (virtual) pub.
Headline speakers at the Festival include journalist Emily Maitlis, the presenter of BBC Two's flagship Newsnight programme; physicist, author and broadcaster, Jim Al-Khalili; Philip Alston, former United Nations Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty; Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee; behavioural scientist Dr Pragya Agarwal; V&A Museum’s Keeper of the Asian Department, Anna Jackson; and LBC radio presenter and broadcaster Iain Dale.[44]
2021 – Infinite Horizons
Due to the ongoing Covid-19 restrictions in place in the UK, the 2021 festival (8–20 June) took place predominantly online for the second year in a row, this time under the banner of Infinite Horizons. The international launch event, filmed in York Minster and entitled She-Energy: Women as creators featured an array of international musicians, writers and poets and a specially commissioned performance by acclaimed violinist and composer Anna Phoebe.[45]
Other speakers included the writer and historian William Dalrymple, public historian and broadcaster Greg Jenner and activist and former politician Magid Magid.
2022 – The Next Chapter
The 2022 festival took place between 11 and 24 June under the theme of "...The Next Chapter". Following two years of online festivals due to the Covid-19 pandemic, this year's took a hybrid approach, continuing the online provision for audiences whilst also reintroducing in-person events around the city of York. As such, the festival was able to attract a worldwide audience of over 40,000 over the course of nearly 200 events. Festival Director Joan Concannon stated that "looking back a few years from now, this year’s hybrid format will be viewed as a milestone in the history of the Festival" as it established a balanced provision that reaffirmed the festival's commitment to remaining as accessible as possible.[46]
The 2022 festival attracted Oscar-winning film editor and University of York alumnus, Joe Walker, crime writer Ann Cleeves and actress Dame Harriet Walter among others.[47]
2023 – Rediscover, Reimagine, Rebuild
The 2023 festival ran from the 2 to the 15 June. Following the success of the 2022 festival's hybrid approach, this year's continued to run a combination of online and in-person events, inviting audiences to "Rediscover, Reimagine, Rebuild". Michael Morpurgo returned to the festival to celebrate the 40th anniversary of his beloved book War Horse with an abridged reading of this tale accompanied by music and songs from the famous National Theatre production.
Other speakers included the BBC presenter and Team GB triathlete Louise Minchin, former Chief Prosecutor Nazir Afzal and bestselling author, historian and broadcaster Tracy Borman.[48]