Portsmouth Arts Festival Page

By 2024, the festival featured over 200 artists across 40 venues, drawing an estimated 15,000 visitors. The funding mix has shifted too—now a blend of Arts Council England grants, Portsmouth City Council backing, and a surprisingly robust crowdfunding campaign from locals who donate via the “Friends of the Ferry” scheme. What sets PAF apart from homogenized “art walks” in Brighton or Winchester is its forensic use of place. Curators lean into Portsmouth’s unique, sometimes ugly, topography.

The organizers are aware. This year’s theme is “Unfinished Business,” deliberately embracing rough edges, live painting, and works that degrade over the week. The opening night party will not be in a hired hall, but in a working boatyard, with a DJ set playing from the gantry of a dry dock. portsmouth arts festival

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.” By 2024, the festival featured over 200 artists

Crucially, the festival acts as a talent pipeline. Local graduate shows from the University’s Creative and Cultural Industries faculty have seen a 40% increase in retention rates since PAF began. Artists who once felt forced to move to Bristol or London are now staying, forming collectives, and opening permanent micro-galleries in the arches beneath the railway viaduct. The opening night party will not be in

“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.”