The Great Exhibition Road Festival

2025 PROPOSALS PROCESS GUIDANCE

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Family laughing at Great Exhibition Road Festival
Four speakers sitting in chairs on stage
Father and son crafting at Great Exhibition Road Festival

Father and son crafting at Great Exhibition Road Festival

Father and son crafting at Great Exhibition Road Festival

Cowds at the Great Exhibition Road Festival

Introduction:

The Great Exhibition Road Festival is a flagship public event in the Imperial calendar, delivered in collaboration with our world-leading cultural neighbours including the Royal Albert Hall, Science Museum, Natural History Museum, Royal College of Music, and the Victoria & Albert Museum. It celebrates the vision of Exhibition Road as a place to discover and explore science and the arts.

The 2024 Festival saw over 50,000 visitors enjoying a diverse programme of awe-inspiring creative workshops, music and other artistic performances, innovative hands-on demonstrations, and live experiments.

The Festival will return next year 7-8 June 2025, offering another weekend of events between 12-6pm each day.

As in previous years, the Festival organisers in Imperial’s Public Engagement team are kicking off the countdown to the 2025 Festival with an open call for proposals from across the Imperial community.

Before submitting a proposal, we strongly recommend you read this guidance in full, which sets out the support available to you before and during the Festival, details the audiences that we want to attract and the experience we want to give them (and yourselves as potential exhibitors).

It also covers specific opportunities for Imperial staff and students to get involved in the Festival programme, as well as the roles and responsibilities that come with submitting a proposal.

Flag with The Great Exhibition Road Festival printed on it

Table of Contents

  1. Aims of the Festival
  2. Available support
    a. During the proposal process
    b. If your proposal is successful
  3. Audiences
  4. Responsibilities of participating teams
  5. What we are looking for in the 2024 Festival proposals
  6. Types of contribution
  7. Support offered for different types of content

1. Aims of the Festival

  • To create a unique Festival that connects some of the world’s most iconic institutions in an inspirational fusion of the arts and sciences.
  • To deliver a dynamic range of participatory visitor experiences that generate curiosity and a pioneering spirit among our audiences and institutions.
  • To engage 50,000+ people through events taking place on Exhibition Road and across partner institutions over the Festival weekend.
  • To engage communities and audiences who do not usually access our institutions through co-created projects that are part of the Festival weekend.
  • To celebrate diversity – the diversity of our communities, and that within art and science.
  • 2. Available support

    a. During the proposal process

    If (after reading this guidance document) you would like to discuss your festival ideas further, we would recommend you book onto our online Great Exhibition Road Festival advice session.

    At this event you can hear all about the Festival from its organisers, learn about the proposals process, get feedback on your initial ideas and answers to any logistical questions you may have.

    If the above session (and this guidance document) still leaves you with questions, you can also book a one-to-one session with the Festival programming team.

    We understand that online forms such as the one used for the Festival proposals process can present a barrier for certain people e.g. from a language or neurodiverse perspective. If that is the case, we are open to receiving your proposed ideas over email, over the phone or during an in-person meeting.

    Please contact James Romero, Public Engagement Programmes Manager, if any of those options are preferable (email: j.romero@imperial.ac.uk).

    Exhibitor talking to a child at the Great Exhibition Road Festival

    a. During the proposal process

    If (after reading this guidance document) you would like to discuss your festival ideas further, we would recommend you book onto our online Great Exhibition Road Festival advice session.

    At this event you can hear all about the Festival from its organisers, learn about the proposals process, get feedback on your initial ideas and answers to any logistical questions you may have.

    If the above session (and this guidance document) still leaves you with questions, you can also book a one-to-one session with the Festival programming team.

    We understand that online forms such as the one used for the Festival proposals process can present a barrier for certain people e.g. from a language or neurodiverse perspective. If that is the case, we are open to receiving your proposed ideas over email, over the phone or during an in-person meeting.

    Please contact James Romero, Public Engagement Programmes Manager, if any of those options are preferable (email: j.romero@imperial.ac.uk).

    Singer with pink hair holding a guitar and smiling

    b. If your proposal is successful

    If your Festival proposal is successful, you will be contacted early in the New Year with details of your point of contact within the Festival team going forward, and most likely a specific location across the Festival site where you will be based.

    You will also be invited to two meetings with the wider Public Engagement team at Imperial over the six months leading up to the Festival weekend. At least one member of your Festival team will need to attend each of these meetings.

    1. Intro to your Festival Zone Manager (mid-late January) – you will be introduced to your Festival zone manager via a short Microsoft Teams call with everyone else in your Zone. The call will also cover the key paperwork you will need to fill in over the next 4-5 months and their deadlines, as well as some general advice around turning your initial idea into a fully realised and successful Festival activity. We would expect the person taking the lead on each successful Festival proposal to attend these sessions, though other members of the team are also welcome to join.

    2. A communications and engagement skills workshop (throughout late April-early May - exact dates TBC) – this half-day, in-person workshop will run numerous times in the late spring/early summer and will focus on practical tips and effective strategies to engage audiences with your research at the Festival. Its aim is to improve the quality of dialogue taking place at exhibits and to provide staff and students with the skills to communicate scientific ideas and prompt discussion confidently and creatively with the public.

    The session will also highlight key considerations to ensure your exhibit is as accessible and inclusive as possible for a diverse Festival audience. We require one or two members from each team to attend. Ideally these would be individuals who are less experienced in engagement and who have not attended this type of training previously (or our ‘Communications in Engagement Masterclass,’ as there is some crossover). Content and materials will be shared afterwards and made available to your whole team.

    3. Audiences

    The Festival attracts a varied audience of all ages, with different levels of knowledge and interest in science. London families are a key audience, with parents wanting their children to feel inspired by our research, however 41% of 2024 crowds were adults attending with other adults, or by themselves. Many of the Festival’s cultural and museum partners will create family-friendly events for their contribution to the Festival, so we are keen to ensure that adult and young adult audiences are well catered for as well.

    Exhibitor talking to visitors at the Great Exhibition Road Festival

    Under-represented audiences

    By digging into the data of who has come to previous Festivals, we have identified specific audiences who are under-represented in the current Festival demographics. We hope to work with and cater for more of these audiences within our programming. It is useful for you to know who these audiences are, and why we are keen to specifically target and cater for them, as this might inform your Festival proposal. More specifically, if your team is particularly keen to engage one or more of these under-represented groups or believe your ideas will be particularly engaging for one or more of these audiences, please make that clear in your proposal.

    Under-represented audiences

    By digging into the data of who has come to previous Festivals, we have identified specific audiences who are under-represented in the current Festival demographics. We hope to work with and cater for more of these audiences within our programming. It is useful for you to know who these audiences are, and why we are keen to specifically target and cater for them, as this might inform your Festival proposal. More specifically, if your team is particularly keen to engage one or more of these under-represented groups or believe your ideas will be particularly engaging for one or more of these audiences, please make that clear in your proposal.

    African and/or Caribbean audiences

    Visitors that identify as belonging to this group are the lowest percentage that attend the Festival (significantly lower than the 14% from across London that identify as belonging to these communities). London is a diverse and culturally mixed society and we want the Festival audience to reflect this. There are also large communities of African and/or Caribbean communities in the three local boroughs most relevant to Imperial – see below for more detail on local audiences.

    Local audiences

    We have experienced low turnout of local audiences from the most underserved parts of the three boroughs that Imperial College London work hard to engage with: Hammersmith and Fulham, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster. Many of these targeted local communities represent the wider London landscape (a diverse and culturally mixed society) so the Festival needs to cater to this audience. Imperial College London works with local audiences through many initiatives, so we want to continue to offer the Festival as part of our ongoing relationship with them.

    Young People

    Young people aged 13-25 have stated in the past they don’t feel like they have a space at the Festival, which is why we created a zone specifically for this age group in 2023. It grew into the Next Gen zone in 2024, which will be returning again 2025, offering a space for 13-25-year-olds to engage with Imperial Science in fun, attractive and engaging ways. This zone is co-curated with 5-6 local young people (the Zone Producers) that are familiar with the Festival and can inform us about how to best engage their age group with our research. Imperial College London works with young people through many outreach and engagement initiatives, and we want to continue to offer the Festival as part of our ongoing relationship with them.

    Young person wearing a VR headset

    Young People

    Young people aged 13-25 have stated in the past they don’t feel like they have a space at the Festival, which is why we created a zone specifically for this age group in 2023. It grew into the Next Gen zone in 2024, which will be returning again 2025, offering a space for 13-25-year-olds to engage with Imperial Science in fun, attractive and engaging ways. This zone is co-curated with 5-6 local young people (the Zone Producers) that are familiar with the Festival and can inform us about how to best engage their age group with our research. Imperial College London works with young people through many outreach and engagement initiatives, and we want to continue to offer the Festival as part of our ongoing relationship with them.

    Nuerodiverse audiences

    Another audience that are not necessarily under-represented but require additional consideration in your Festival activity development are those people who identify as neurodiverse. Someone who is neurodivergent can be described as having a commonly co-occurring ‘condition’ related to processing or cognitive differences. These conditions could be: Dyslexia, Autism, ADHD, and more. Another widely used term is Specific Learning Difference (SpLD). 16% of Festival attendees in 2024 identified that they are neurodivergent (with 9% stating they weren’t sure and 6% preferring not to say).

    To cater for neurodivergent children, we have established a popular relaxed early morning slot for families with neurodivergent children on the Sunday of the Festival weekend, which we want to continue in 2025. However, it is important all our participating teams across the Festival site take into account the needs of this community in the development of their Festival activity. A good place to start is Imperial’s own EDI pages on dyslexia and neurodivergence.

    4. Responsibilities of participating teams

    By submitting a Festival proposal, you are entering into an agreement that you will accept certain responsibilities associated with your proposed activity. If you are unable to commit to any of these areas of responsibility, then we cannot guarantee your involvement in next year’s Festival.

    Be available to meet with your Festival point of contacts if requested

    In the new year you will be assigned a Festival Zone Manager, i.e. a member of the central Festival organising team who will be your go-to contact from that point until the Festival weekend itself. You will be invited to a 1-hour kick off meeting with them where they will introduce themselves, tell you more about the Zone where your activity has been placed and cover the upcoming deadlines and support available. After that they will provide feedback on your proposal before collating the logistical and operational information on your activity (see below).

    For most successful proposals, Zone Managers will still need to meet individual teams to discuss their ideas in more detail. This is not necessarily a criticism of your proposal, but often a reflection of the logistical considerations that come with some of the public spaces we use for the Festival which might affect what you hope to deliver and how you deliver it. Such conversations are essential to helping our Zone Managers provide each team with the best possible location within their Festival zone, as well as the right power, equipment and health and safety paperwork to ensure the best outcomes over the Festival weekend.

    Organise practise session and run throughs

    In the weeks leading up to the Festival your Zone Manager might get in touch to organise in-person run throughs. This is mostly relevant for those running creative workshops, giving headline talks or organising more complicated/higher-risk tabletop exhibits. If you have been asked to set one of these meetings up, it is because the Festival team believe it will be really beneficial to the successful delivery of your activity over the Festival weekend, so please make time to schedule a run through and invite as many of the team who will be working with you over the weekend to attend.

    If you are giving a talk and are asked to find time for a run-through, we hope you would have written most of your talk by the time of the run-through, so the Festival talks manager can give some useful feedback on the structure and audience appropriateness of your presentation.

    Stay in regular communication with your Festival contact

    After these initial meetings or proposal feedback emails, please stay in contact with your Festival zone manager over the entire period leading up to the Festival weekend. This means replying to their request for paperwork updates, as well as proactively informing them if anything changes in the makeup of your team or what you can deliver over the Festival weekend.

    Meet your deadlines in the Festival timeline

    Below is a table covering key actions and dates for the 2025 Festival. When you meet your festival zone managers in January, we will provide a more detailed timeline with deadlines allocated to specific days. Please keep to these deadlines.

    Action

    When?

    Notes?

    You will receive a response on whether your activity can be accommodated within the 2025 Festival programme

    January

    Whilst we try our best to accommodate as many teams as possible each year, the Festival site has a limited capacity. For those unable to take part, we are committed to helping those teams deliver their activity at future Festivals or other public engagement events throughout the year.

    Festival proposal leads to attend an online kick-off call with their new Festival Zone Manager

    Mid-Late January

    These calls will focus less on the details of your ideas and more about the logistical and operational considerations of the space you have been allocated, as well as a more detailed list of the paperwork you will need to complete and deadlines for submitting them. As a result, only the people leading on the Festival proposal need to attend.

    Approve copy and key info for Festival website and/or printed programme

    End of February

    Relevant only to teams proposing talks, workshops, installations, performances or shows. Your Festival Zone Manager will provide templates for you to fill in, or first drafts of text for you to feedback on, by mid-February.

    Submit completed risk assessment form signed off by a department safety role.

    Early April

    A risk assessment template and guidance document along with filled in examples from previous years will be shared in the new year. Guidance on completing your form will be covered in your January kick-off meeting with your Festival zone manager.

    One or two members of your team to attend the Public Engagement training session/workshop

    Mid-April to Mid-May

    This workshop will be held in person, in both South Kensington and White City. There are several dates to choose from and a booking link will be shared with you.

    Confirm requirements around overnight storage of Festival equipment

    Early May

    There is limited space for overnight storage so requests will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis (priority will be given to non-SK teams based at other campuses)

    Submit final list of names, CID numbers and dietary requirements for lunch

    Early May

    A lunch order template will be shared by your Festival zone manager in the new year. Lunch is only available to individuals volunteering for half a day or more across the weekend.

    Confirm details of any vehicle drop offs or collections during Festival set up or break down

    Early May

    Ideally any equipment should be dropped off on the Friday, or the week leading up to the Festival, and collected on the Sunday night / Monday morning.

    Confirm details of any parking spaces required

    Mid May

    Please be aware that parking spots over the weekend will be extremely limited. Spaces are allocated on a first come first served basis so please tell us as soon as you can.

    Social media asset saying 'one week to go'

    Co-promote your event locally and on social media

    The Festival benefits from everyone involved getting behind it and sharing invites with all their friends and families. Towards the end of spring / start of summer we will provide marketing materials with registration links for you to share over email, across social media or even on WhatsApp groups.

    Plan your set up, pack down and the staffing of your activity

    In the months leading up to the Festival, you will be allocated a slot to set up your activity ahead of the Festival opening to the public. Please make best use of this time. This should include testing all electronic and internet connected devices in situ. If there are likely to be any challenges transporting equipment over the Festival weekend, please raise these with your Festival Zone Manager in good time, bearing in mind most trolleys will already be allocated to other Festival set up jobs. The Festival operates under the agreement that our campus and Exhibition Road are back to normal operations by Sunday night, so please ensure pack down plans take this into account.

    Take full responsibility for the health and safety of your event

    As always, everyone delivering any type of activity across the Festival weekend will need to fill in a risk assessment form, which will be provided in the new year. This form will ask you to list actions you will take to minimise risks posed by your activity. It is your responsibility to not just fill in this form and get it signed off by a departmental or faculty level safety officer, but also to ensure any mitigating actions and policies are adhered to over the weekend.

    5. What we are looking for in the 2025 Festival proposals

    Each year we evaluate the Festival and collect feedback from exhibitors, visitors, and volunteers to find out what they most valued. Based on this, and the Festival aims listed above, we have the following suggestions for teams wanting to take part in 2025. Whilst we are not expecting each proposal to include all the elements below, we recommend at least considering how you might incorporate each into what you are submitting.

    We would also strongly recommend teams consult the variety of engagement toolkits and resources that have been developed by Imperial’s Public Engagement team. Some of the most relevant ones for different types of activities are linked to later on this guide.

    Ideas linked to themed areas or zones

    Once we have received all proposals, we will group them into themed Zones across the Festival site. The Festival Team have identified some themes in advance that we would like to have present at the 2025 Festival. Below is a list of those pre-agreed themes and some more information on what they entail. Please make it clear in your application if your activity fits into any of these themes. There is still plenty of room for ideas outside of these pre-agreed themes if your idea doesn’t fit.

    Themed zone or area

    Location

    Explanation

    European collaborations

    Imperial Main Entrance

    For the 2025 Festival there is strong interest in bringing together a collection of content and activities that highlight Imperial’s strong links with friends across Europe. In the proposals form, question number 8 asks for details of any collaborators. Please let us know here if your activity relates to research carried out in collaboration with European Institutions, or with funding from the Horizon Europe programme

     

    Participatory research

    TBC

    We know many Festival attendees enjoy being consulted or involved in research.  Participatory approaches to research broadly refer to public participants being able to influence how research happens at any stage of a research cycle (e.g. co-production, co-creation, citizen science). As a result, we are planning a dedicated space for Festival attendees to ‘get involved in science’ and would therefore welcome proposals that contribute in any way to a more participatory culture around Imperial research. If you are interested in participatory research, please sign up to our next Public Engagement Masterclass on this topic.

     

    Sensory experiences

    Exhibition Road

    For 2025, we have taken the decision to theme Exhibition Road, treating it as a zone like many other parts of the Festival site. The theme of ‘sensory experiences’ has been chosen as it is broad and allows many of our Festival partners to contribute to it. We also hope it challenges Festival experience partners to come up with new ways (beyond purely visual experiences) to help the public explore their subject area. As a result, we would welcome any activities that stimulate our taste buds, ears, vision, sense of touch, sense of smell or explore research into human senses and the super-senses we find in the animal world/are being created in machines. Please note that Exhibition Road is the busiest part of the Festival site and any activity ideas from Imperial teams would need to be scalable to engage thousands of people across the Festival weekend. If you have an idea for a multi-sensory experience that won't work out on Exhibition Road, we would still be very keen to explore it with you – particularly as this type of content can work very well from an access and inclusion perspective.

    Programming for under-represented audiences (see list above)

    This can come in many forms. Broadly, we would welcome proposals that are targeted specifically at under-represented communities. This could be linked to our Festival visitors as well as those aiming to showcase members of the Imperial community who are themselves representatives of marginalised or underserved communities. If a proposal also aims to celebrate a scientist or academic (Imperial affiliated or external) from an under-represented group who influenced them and/or their field, that would also be warmly welcomed.

    Science and art collaborations

    In surveys of Great Exhibition Road Festival attendees, our visitors frequently comment on the unique interaction between the arts and sciences – particularly in relation to creative workshops, striking public art, immersive experiences or live performances. If you think a collaboration with an artist or creative workshop developer could help to tell the story of your research, we would love to hear from you. If you already have a creative collaborator in mind, that would be great. If not, we can help identify someone to bring on board and work with you. With a local agenda part of our planning for the 2025 Festival (see below), we would particularly welcome proposals that involve collaborations with local artists or creative collectives.

    Collaborations with the local community

    One ambition we introduced for the 2024 Festival (and are keen to continue in 2025) is to increase the local element and feel of the Festival. One way we can do that through this proposals process is to give a platform to any Imperial projects that are working with nearby communities or community groups. Our hope is these proposals would not simply involve an Imperial team reporting on the success of any collaboration, but involve inviting the local collaborators to the Festival to help tell the story of this partnership from their own perspective.

    Immersive or reflective experiences

    Each year we are learning how the Festival can better use the full range of spaces and venues available to us across Exhibition Road. In many of the indoor venues, we have access to secluded or closed off areas or rooms which are perfect for individual teams to take over and create immersive experiences or chilled out environments for a different type of engagement with Imperial research. In such spaces, relatively simple use of soundtracks and lighting can create quite powerful sensory experiences that can momentarily take people away from the busy Festival outside. At the Festival we would be keen to work with any teams who have ambitions to create this type of experience for our Festival visitors – and again there is the option for us to commission experienced immersive/installation artist to work you to make your ideas a reality.

    Ideas with media hooks or the launch of new institutions or facilities

    The Festival employs Press and PR experts each year to help us publicise the event in the weeks and months leading up to it. From this year’s publicity campaign, we found it useful to approach exhibiting Imperial teams or speakers that had research news or announcements we could share with the media, which tied to the research shown at the Festival. This helps make the Festival feel newsworthy and fresh. We would also welcome collaborating with the communications leads from your department/teams on this side of things.

    Mother and daughter dancing with headsets on
    Artist painting large canvas
    Two figures back lit against a screen
    Speaker talking at the Festival

    Programming for under-represented audiences (see list above)

    This can come in many forms. Broadly, we would welcome proposals that are targeted specifically at under-represented communities. This could be linked to our Festival visitors as well as those aiming to showcase members of the Imperial community who are themselves representatives of marginalised or underserved communities. If a proposal also aims to celebrate a scientist or academic (Imperial affiliated or external) from an under-represented group who influenced them and/or their field, that would also be warmly welcomed.

    Science and art collaborations

    In surveys of Great Exhibition Road Festival attendees, our visitors frequently comment on the unique interaction between the arts and sciences – particularly in relation to creative workshops, striking public art, immersive experiences or live performances. If you think a collaboration with an artist or creative workshop developer could help to tell the story of your research, we would love to hear from you. If you already have a creative collaborator in mind, that would be great. If not, we can help identify someone to bring on board and work with you. With a local agenda part of our planning for the 2025 Festival (see below), we would particularly welcome proposals that involve collaborations with local artists or creative collectives.

    Collaborations with the local community

    One ambition we introduced for the 2024 Festival (and are keen to continue in 2025) is to increase the local element and feel of the Festival. One way we can do that through this proposals process is to give a platform to any Imperial projects that are working with nearby communities or community groups. Our hope is these proposals would not simply involve an Imperial team reporting on the success of any collaboration, but involve inviting the local collaborators to the Festival to help tell the story of this partnership from their own perspective.

    Immersive or reflective experiences

    Each year we are learning how the Festival can better use the full range of spaces and venues available to us across Exhibition Road. In many of the indoor venues, we have access to secluded or closed off areas or rooms which are perfect for individual teams to take over and create immersive experiences or chilled out environments for a different type of engagement with Imperial research. In such spaces, relatively simple use of soundtracks and lighting can create quite powerful sensory experiences that can momentarily take people away from the busy Festival outside. At the Festival we would be keen to work with any teams who have ambitions to create this type of experience for our Festival visitors – and again there is the option for us to commission experienced immersive/installation artist to work you to make your ideas a reality.

    Ideas with media hooks or the launch of new institutions or facilities

    The Festival employs Press and PR experts each year to help us publicise the event in the weeks and months leading up to it. From this year’s publicity campaign, we found it useful to approach exhibiting Imperial teams or speakers that had research news or announcements we could share with the media, which tied to the research shown at the Festival. This helps make the Festival feel newsworthy and fresh. We would also welcome collaborating with the communications leads from your department/teams on this side of things.

    6. Types of contribution

    The Festival proposals form lists seven different types of experiences that we could offer visitors in 2025, as well as an ‘other’ option for ideas that don’t fit into these categories.

    Here we describe each in a bit more detail:

    Children in a science exhibit

    Interactive Exhibit/Hands-on Demonstration

    This is a permanent activity that occupies a space within the Festival site throughout the weekend. These are staffed by the teams who create them and bring visual and/or interactive components that will help to tell the story of an area of research.

    Relevant resources and guides:
    How do I design hands-on activities?
    How can I engage through games and play?

    A painting of a human heart, surrounded by figures doing exercise

    Installation/Exhibition

    Like an exhibit, an installation is a permanent feature of the Festival, but does not necessarily need to be constantly staffed and often takes a more artistic or creative approach to introducing the research topic. Installations might include immersive experiences, interactive sculptures, escape rooms, art exhibitions or photography displays linked to Imperial research.

    Relevant resources and guides:
    How do I create a science exhibition?

    Two people at a panel event

    Talk/Discussion

    Festival talks give a predominantly adult audience (16+) a chance to hear about a particular subject in a bit more depth. Talks are generally 20 minutes in length, with additional time for discussion and questions. They must be developed and delivered for non-experts with a publicly appealing title. As well as individual speakers, we are always interested in slightly longer panel sessions (30-40 minutes) that bring speakers from different backgrounds and sectors together to discuss a single topic. Discussion panels need to be diverse in as many ways as possible and can include external speakers – ideally from the Festival partnership or the local community.

    Relevant resources and guides:
    How do I give an engaging talk?

    Children in an art workshop

    Workshop

    Workshops give members of the public a chance to get involved in making, creating or contributing to something. It can be something that they take away, or leave behind as a growing exhibit for other Festival attendees to enjoy and add to. Alternatively, it can be a skills or reflective workshop which give the public the opportunity to learn or think about something in a participatory way.

    Teams interested in delivering a workshop often get paired with artists or experienced creative professionals to help develop and/or deliver the activity (if they feel this would be beneficial to the final result). For high-throughput, drop-in workshops in busy areas of the Festival site, it is vital that teams recruit enough volunteer staff to help manage and guide people through the workshop exercise.

    Musicians on the main festival stage

    Stage performance

    The Festival has numerous stages and tents which are open to proposals from both professional and amateur performers. We are particularly keen for ideas that include audience interaction and/or where music or dance can be used to illustrate areas of Imperial research.

    In terms of parts of the Festival site, we are once again looking for teams with research linked to food who would be interested in being paired with a catering professional for the live kitchen cook-along stage. Meanwhile, our Science Cabaret stage sees researchers at Imperial help us to create and deliver interactive game shows or performance-led stage pieces for more of an adult audience. Examples from previous years has included cellular poetry performances, mathematical bingo games, rainforest storytelling workshops and algorithmic art sessions.

    Relevant resources and guides:
    How do I organise a science performance?

    A scientist on stilts entertaining a crowd

    Roaming performance

    We are keen to bring Exhibition Road and Imperial College Road to life wherever possible, and one of the best ways to do this is organising mobile demos or exhibits that can move up and down the road.

    Roaming performers will be given a wet weather back-up location.

    A science explainer and child with ear protectors doing a fun experiment

    Shows

    Festival shows take place in a lecture theatre but are more interactive and dynamic than a talk. Aimed at a family rather than specifically adult audience, they often have more in common with a Christmas lecture at the Royal Institution than a TEDx talk, with a central story illustrated through audience interaction and live experiments. Due to their popularity, they are often repeated several times a day across the Festival weekend. Like workshops, interested Imperial teams will often be paired with an experienced storyteller and/or show developer to create a memorable performance.

    7. Support offered for different types of content

    The central Festival team will provide different types of support to teams depending on the nature of the activity. While there will always be exceptions to the rules listed below, this table gives a sense of what you can expect from the central Festival team for each type of Festival content listed above.

    Talks

    Workshop

    Exhibit

    Installation

    Stage performance

    Roaming

    performance

    Show

    Support and advice from our

    programming team

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Provision of furniture and electrical equipment

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Pre-event promotion of your Festival activity

    Yes

    Yes

    Maybe

    Yes

    Yes

    Maybe

    Yes

    Capturing of your activity in official Festival

    photography and videography

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Event management staff to help in your activity delivery

    Yes

    No

    No

    No

    Yes

    No

    Yes

    Ticket office / Pre-registration managed by the Festival

    Maybe

    No

    No

    No

    No

    No

    Yes

    Material costs

    covered by Festival

    N/A

    Maybe

    No

    Maybe

    Maybe

    No

    Yes

    Fees for external speakers or

    artistic collaborators covered by the Festival team

    Yes

    Maybe

    No

    Maybe

    Maybe

    Yes

    Yes

    Your activity will be featured in the Festival printed programme

    Maybe

    Maybe

    No

    Maybe

    Maybe

    No

    Maybe

    Your activity will be featured in the Festival online programme

    Yes

    Yes

    No

    Maybe

    Yes

    Maybe

    Yes

    And in return...

    Expected delivery time across the weekend

    Up to 1 hour

    2 full days (minus time for resetting)

    2 full days

    2 full days

    Up to 30 minutes performance – perhaps

    repeated 2-3 times

    Minimum of 3 hours of performance each day

    30-40 minute show repeated 3-4 times each day