Portsmouth Arts Festival -
PORTSMOUTH, UK – For decades, the tourist narrative of Portsmouth has been written in salt spray and steel. Visitors come for the Mary Rose , for Nelson’s Victory , and for the stoic silhouette of the Spinnaker Tower. It is a city of maritime heritage, naval might, and hard-working pragmatism.
Equally striking is the festival’s embrace of the commercial void. As high-street retail struggles, PAF has brokered temporary “meanwhile use” licenses with landlords. Abandoned carpet stores become projection rooms. A former betting shop on Fratton Road became a sound-art labyrinth. This pragmatic curating turns urban decay into a canvas, forcing passersby—who might never set foot in a traditional gallery—to walk directly through an artwork to get to the chip shop. Not everyone is convinced. Walk down Albert Road during the festival and you’ll hear the grumbles. portsmouth arts festival
“It’s changed the identity of the city,” says Councillor Linda Corey, the city’s cabinet member for culture. “For a long time, Portsmouth was proud of its past. The festival is making us proud of our present.” As PAF grows, it faces a familiar challenge: How to scale without selling out. The risk is that the “feral charm” of the early years gets replaced by corporate sponsorship and health-and-safety overreach. Already, some locals whisper that the festival has become too organized—that the spreadsheets have replaced the spontaneity. PORTSMOUTH, UK – For decades, the tourist narrative
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. Equally striking is the festival’s embrace of the
“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.”
