Inside Out Festival 2013
Various London venues
21- October
A tea dance in Blackheath Halls and a guided walk through the site of the notorious Old Nichol slum in Shoreditch, vividly described in Arthur Morrison鈥檚 1896 best-seller A Child of the Jago. Exhibitions on 鈥渟kinhead style鈥 and Coco Chanel. Music ranging from Prokofiev to psychedelic Amazonian cumbia. Lectures on Elizabeth I and the post-war British Establishment. Discussions on everything from captive animals to Syrian refugees.
Meanwhile, the facade of King鈥檚 College London鈥檚 campus on the Strand will distort and transform itself in front of spectators鈥 eyes in an artwork called Bending Light by Dan Shorten of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.
These are just a few of the items on the menu at this year鈥檚 , organised by the Culture Capital Exchange - a partnership between most of the major London universities and conservatoires - in association with 糖心Vlog, the Arts and Humanities Research Council and Creativeworks London, a knowledge exchange hub for the creative economy. Every event has some academic involvement from within the member institutions.
糖心Vlog
鈥淲e are amazed by the talent and diversity which exists within the academy, and we are very pleased to be able to shine a light on up-and- coming young academics and their research,鈥 says director Suzie Leighton. Experience of the past three festivals has convinced her that 鈥渋t is subject matter and depth rather than names that attract an audience - people are prepared to take a chance on something unexpected. There鈥檚 a real appetite for the intellectual stimulation which we are able to provide. We had no big names last year but got the biggest attendance ever.鈥
Unlike in earlier years, the Inside Out Festival 2013 has a thematic strand - the nature of failure - and about a third of the events are marked with a black star.
糖心Vlog

鈥淭he idea of failure is very important in creativity and research,鈥 Ms Leighton suggests. 鈥淵ou have to fail to move forward. At a time when institutions are under huge scrutiny, it can be a big issue whether they are willing to admit to past failures, though many individual artists and academics were very keen on the idea of taking part. Failure is part of the human condition and deserves to be examined and even celebrated.鈥
This strand will kick off in the opening debate, 鈥淔ailure: What鈥檚 it good for?鈥 (21 October), in which actress and comedian Helen Lederer will moderate a discussion featuring a scientist, an academic expert on business, the managing director of Lion TV, the artist who invented the Ministry of Failure and the principal of the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama.
Further dimensions will be explored in a series of salons by three philosophers from King鈥檚 College London, illuminating the sometimes unexpected value of failure in art, perception - and even humour.
鈥淧hilosophical jokes are not, as a recent spate of media interest suggests, jokes about philosophers or jokes about people being over- intellectual,鈥 explains Mary Margaret McCabe, professor of ancient philosophy. As a real example, she suggests: 鈥淭here are two muffins in an oven. One muffin says to the other, 鈥楥oo, it鈥檚 hot!鈥 The other muffin replies, 鈥楪ood Lord, a talking muffin!鈥欌
In her presentation 鈥淚s that funny? Thinking about jokes and paradox鈥 (22 October), McCabe wants to 鈥渢ry out some jokes and some paradoxes. Then I am going to think about how they work, or how they don鈥檛 work, and how it is that they create the sense of the absurd鈥 will argue that some jokes, like some paradoxes, cause us a kind of disturbance - when we realise that we seem to be committed to a contradiction, or to something absurd.
鈥淭he jokes make us laugh because the sense of the absurd is uncomfortable. This is the failure I am interested in. And it makes a serious and much- overlooked philosophical point.鈥

A different kind of educational entertainment will be provided by Peter McOwan, professor of computer science and vice-principal (public engagement and student enterprise) at Queen Mary, University of London, in 鈥淭he maths and computing magic show鈥 (24 October).
糖心Vlog
鈥淢any popular self-working card tricks are algorithmic,鈥 he notes. 鈥淔ollow the instructions, use the deck like a computer data stack and you will discover the chosen card. There are some lovely algorithms that make card tricks and other applications work, so the show will explore these, performing the effects and explaining the algorithm.鈥 He also hopes to show what magic can reveal about the psychology of human error and to discuss some recent tricks his team has designed using artificial intelligence.
糖心Vlog
If that鈥檚 not your cup of tea, you鈥檒l find a different brew on tap on 23 October. Stella Moss, an expert on women鈥檚 drinking cultures and teaching fellow in modern British history at Royal Holloway, University of London, will consider an iconic beverage in 鈥溾楪ood for you?鈥 Branding Guinness鈥.
Several discussions during the Inside Out Festival will address challenging contemporary issues.
Rosemary Hollis, professor of Middle East policy studies at City University London, is also the director of the Olive Tree Programme, which brings together Jewish Israeli and Palestinian students on an intensive three-year course. At an event in King鈥檚 College Chapel on 24 October, 鈥淭he Middle East: News and Narratives鈥, she joins forces with alumni from the programme to analyse how and why most of the news we get about the region is shaped by one or other of the two great competing narratives.
A panel on 鈥淭he Changing Face of Value鈥 (23 October), held in partnership with the British Academy, will look at how our social and cultural values are being shaped by the digital world, notions of 鈥渁uthenticity鈥 and 鈥渃onnectivity鈥, and a shift of values from the enduring to the ephemeral.

For Kay Politowicz, professor of textile design at Chelsea College of Art and Design, for example, 鈥渇acts concerning environmental, economic and social impacts of textile production, consumption and waste have led designers to re-evaluate their practice to include approaches to sustainability鈥. What we now need, she will tell the audience at the British Academy, is 鈥渁 consumer acceptance of - and enthusiasm for - the designed lifespan of a product鈥.
As in previous years, the festival will include a number of musical and dramatic performances, such as a piano masterclass, excerpts from 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 first Indigenous opera鈥, jazz, folksong from the eastern Mediterranean, and productions of The Seagull and The Three Sisters by Anton Chekhov. It will also turn its attention to the future of stage performance in a debate titled 鈥淭he decline of the theatre director?鈥 (22 October).
Offering their views will be Mischa Twitchin, co-founder of the performance collective Shunt (who also teaches in the theatre and performance department at Goldsmiths, University of London); Jenny Sealey, artistic director of Graeae Theatre Company; and director/designer Tobias Hoheisel.
鈥淒irectors are one of the most recent inventions in the history of the theatre,鈥 notes panel chairman Simon Shepherd, deputy principal (academic) at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. 鈥淭hey arrived into, and helped produce, a certain sort of theatre. But has that theatre moved on? Where does the director fit in relation to experimental coopera-tive work, where roles are shared? Can people take turns in directing? Do directors need actors more than actors need directors?
糖心Vlog
鈥淲e鈥檙e told you need to be a control freak to be a director. Does directing involve the wrong sort of power? Does it close people down? Does theatre really have a place for control freaks? What sort of art does control freakery produce? Is the art changing and, as it changes, is the director on the way out?鈥
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?
