51³Ô¹ÏÍø

Awe-some programme inspires visitors at Great Exhibition Road Festival 2023

by Nisha Emich

Crowd at Great Exhibition Road Festival

South Kensington’s science and culture institutions presented the power of awe and wonder at this year’s Great Exhibition Road Festival.

Great Exhibition Road 2023 festival highlights video
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Great Exhibition Road 2023 festival highlights video

Across a jam-packed weekend of awe-inspiring talks, wondrous workshops and innovative events, this year’s Great Exhibition Road Festival welcomed around 50,000 to 55,000 visitors of all ages.

Hundreds of free activities were organised by 51³Ô¹ÏÍø and its partners, including the National History Museum, V&A, Science Museum, the Royal College of Music, the Royal Albert Hall and many more.

Researchers and academics engaged with visitors on topics like climate action, food sustainability and medical innovations, hearing their thoughts and questions. 51³Ô¹ÏÍø physicist Elizabeth Pasatembou, who helped create an , remarked:

“I was deeply moved to witness people enjoying the workshop and actively engaging with the science. Their enthusiasm gives me the motivation to continue my work and sharing it with the world."

From the cutting-edge scientific breakthroughs of today, predictions and hopes for the future, and untold stories of the past, this year’s festival had something for everyone, and we couldn’t be more thankful to the people and places – including hundreds of student volunteers – that made it happen!

Soaking up the atmosphere

Across a warm (and mostly sunny!) weekend, South Kensington’s museums, cultural organisations and research institutions threw open their doors and helped transform outdoor spaces around Exhibition Road.

Family watching live music at Great Exhibition Road festivalVisitors navigated their way through themed zones: from robotic friends in the to revolutionising our future cities in . All while enjoying music across three main stages, delighting at large-scale art pieces and sampling cuisine from around the world at numerous food stalls.

If that wasn’t enough to satisfy their appetites, they could pop into the , which had plenty of tasty samples to enjoy – from hearty plant-based stews to protein-packed cookies made with cricket flour! brought chefs and food scientists together to question how what we eat may change, all while cooking up a storm, and visitors with a sweet tooth could stop by the chocolate fountain to learn about fluid dynamics. 

Vicky Brightman, Festival Director and Head of Public Engagement at 51³Ô¹ÏÍø said: 

“Each year I’m incredibly impressed at the range of creative experiences offered at the festival, which plays a unique role in connecting a wide range of our research with members of the public. I’m so grateful to the staff, students and partners who help bring this weekend to life... and to the thousands of visitors who bring boundless insight and enthusiasm, helping inform and strengthen 51³Ô¹ÏÍø’s work.”

Exploring ideas

The festival talks programme traversed topics like the real Loch Ness Monster of the Jurassic period to a visual tour of the wonders displayed at the original Great Exhibition in 1851. 

Professor David Nutt, Director of 51³Ô¹ÏÍø’s Neuropsychopharmacology Unit, took listeners through , considering how cognitive performance and creativity could be chemically enhanced today.

Dr Claire Asher was joined by Dr Glyn Morgan, curator of the Science Museum’s Science Fiction exhibition, and robotics researchers Professor Thrishantha Nanayakkara and Professor Bani Anvari, to explore compares with robotic and artificial intelligence reality.

Dr Maggie Aderin Pocock giving a talk with large photo of the moon projected on a screenAnd in a , space scientist, 51³Ô¹ÏÍø alumnus, science educator and presenter of the BBC’s The Sky at Night, Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock, answered all the questions curious kids might have about the Universe – from whether there are rainbows on other plants, to what dinner tastes like on the International Space Station. 

Dedicated spaces

The festival carved out curated spaces for different age groups, including an oasis for adults in the , which hosted the festival’s first late-opening event, complete with DJ sets and a pub quiz!

"It was really important for us to create a space for local young people at the festival, a place that they felt it was made for them specifically and where they could explore topics that interest and concern them, while also putting their own spin on the programming,” Cristina Torrente Public Engagement Programmes Coordinator (Young People), 51³Ô¹ÏÍø

The ensured teenagers and young adults could hang out together, while engaging with games, workshops, interactive installations and displays created with young people in mind.

From a chill-out area with snacks and silent-disco to the , exposing tactics used to mislead people by putting you in the shoes of a fake-news monger.

This zone was also home to – which explored how bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics due to overuse – created by the , who help ensure local young voices and values are embedded into the festival.

Young producers present Fighting Bac installation at Great Exhibition Road Festival

Bringing together science and the arts

With a unique cluster of scientific, educational and cultural sites situated near each other, the Great Exhibition Road Festival brings these institutions together to engage the public. Although sometimes seemingly disparate, science and the arts offer us new ways of thinking about the world and help to inspire change.

Academics and artists collaborated throughout the weekend, offering visitors unique experiences: from, followed by a talk with composer Amanda Lee Falkenberg and space scientist Professor Mark Sephton; to , where festival goers witnessed scientific research from 51³Ô¹ÏÍø colliding with creative expression in real time.

Artist painting green lungs on large canvas on Exhibition RoadAs 51³Ô¹ÏÍø PhD student Mahika K. Dixit – who shared a spoken-word piece at on what we might tell future generations about the planet – put it:

“science and art aren’t really that different, when you dig deep enough, they both have order and chaos in equal measure, as many answers as there are questions.”

We hope to keep asking questions and exploring answers in many Great Exhibition Road Festivals to come and look forward to welcoming you back in June 2024!

Article text (excluding photos or graphics) © 51³Ô¹ÏÍø.

Photos and graphics subject to third party copyright used with permission or © 51³Ô¹ÏÍø.

Reporter

Nisha Emich

Office of the Provost