Portsmouth: Arts Festival =link=
The 2024 festival seemed to heed that advice. The most talked-about piece was Three Generations of Grit , a photo-text installation by Portsmouth-born photographer Jade Okito. Hung in the waiting room of a working laundrette, the series documented her mother, grandmother, and herself—three women who worked at the dockyard, the call center, and the care home respectively. It was political, raw, and deeply local. It also had a queue around the block. Beyond the discourse, the numbers are compelling. A 2023 economic impact assessment found that PAF generated £1.2 million for the local economy—not through ticket sales (most events are pay-what-you-can), but through secondary spending. Visitors fill hotels, eat at Southsea’s independent restaurants, and drink in pubs.
This friction is healthy, according to Dr. Eleanor Vane, a lecturer in cultural geography at the University of Portsmouth. “Portsmouth has a deep anti-elitist streak. That’s its superpower. The festival succeeds not when it imports trendy London conceptualism, but when it translates those ideas through local stories. The audience here has a built-in ‘BS detector.’ If the art doesn’t connect to lived experience—navy life, island isolation, the cost of living—they walk out.” portsmouth arts festival
“We realized we were waiting for a ‘Southsea Gallery’ that was never coming,” recalls Tom Radford, a founding member and mixed-media sculptor. “Portsmouth has an incredible DIY spirit. If the boat doesn’t float, you patch it. So we patched the art scene.” The 2024 festival seemed to heed that advice
Last year’s standout installation, Sonar for the Soul , took place inside the Round Tower—a 15th-century artillery fort at the mouth of the harbour. Artist Lorna Haines filled the cold, echoing chamber with hydrophones recording the Solent’s seabed, layered over a choir singing sea shanties in reverse. The effect was disorienting, eerie, and utterly specific to that location. It was political, raw, and deeply local