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Out of Many Festival Continues Until Summer 2023

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Out Of Many Festival
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singing outside
Out of Many Festival Pop-up West Indian Front Room Party / Image: David Lindsay
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The Out of Many Festival, organised by the Jamaica Society Leeds, takes its name from Jamaica’s motto Out of Many, One People and launched in 2022 to celebrate 60 years of Jamaican independence. The festival continues into Summer 2023.

From April 4th - 29th at Compton Library, a pop-up exhibition will showcase a selection of exhibits from the hugely successful Rebellion to Romance exhibition which ran at Leeds Central Library until November 2022. Thousands visited the carefully curated mementos, fashions of the day, music and stunning photographs which documented the lives of second-generation West Indians who came of age in the 70s and 80s and the impact of Jamaican culture on them. The acclaimed 'story of a generation' also featured the work of iconic photographer Vanley Burke, and was visited by King Charles III.  The mini pop up exhibition will then move on to the Reginald Centre in Chapeltown in May.  

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images from the exhibition
Photo courtesy J Walwyn; Photograph © Syd Shelton; Vanley Burke, photograph by Candice Nembhard.

Also in April will be an online panel discussion, session Our Art, Our Story led by internationally renowned Caribbean art expert Susanne Hendricks.   Four artists, Leeds-based poet Kayo Chingonyi, illustrator Malachi Lawrence, visual artist Rosanna Gammon and digital artist Natasha Cunningham, Jamaica, have created beautiful responses to Jamaican national motto Out of Many, One People with their works due to be installed at the home of the Jamaica Society Leeds, Jamaica House, and shared online.

Bikkle Roots in partnership with the British Library, will see food heritage discussed in an online panel session.

The Writer As Researcher will see the British Library and Leeds Libraries partner with the Out of Many Festival for this event looking at author approaches to research for their historical writing.

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Alford Gardner, who features in the forthcoming For King, Country and Home pic by David Lindsay
Alford Gardner, who features in the forthcoming For King, Country and Home meeting King Charles / Image: David Lindsay

The much-anticipated For King, Country & Home exhibition opens on Thursday, April 27 at Leeds Central Library and runs until June.   

The exhibition looks at the lives of Jamaican WWII veterans of Leeds and includes photography, keepsakes and memories gathered over the years by the families of those who, pre-Windrush, unwittingly formed the beginnings of the city's Black community.   

And, as the only way to end a year-long Festival dedicated to Jamaican culture is with the That’s a Wrap Reggae Party on May 27th, a fitting celebration with special international and local guest artists and performers from the worlds of music, literature and more. The reggae party is supported by and Arts Council England and Leeds 2023.  

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Susan Pitter
Out of Many Festival director Susan Pitter / Image: Joanne Crawford

Out of Many Festival Director and the curator of both the Rebellion to Romance and For King, Country and Home exhibitions Susan Pitter said: “Being part of a festival which helps to showcase Jamaican culture and the importance it has had on Leeds and beyond has been a privilege and one I am thrilled will continue a little longer than expected in 2023.    

“The response we have had to the Out of Many Festival programme so far - from grass-roots community events to the excellence of icons, pioneers and artists at the top of their game - has been wonderful and rightly recognises the global impact Jamaican culture continues to make.   

“The Festival has showcased the culture that is steeped in our Jamaican roots and has significantly shaped wider Black British culture while bringing together people from all walks of life through music, literature, heritage and the arts.”  

Previous event include Jamaican music history shows Rebellion to Romance and Road to Trojan at Leeds Playhouse, poetry icon Linton Kwesi Johnson in conversation with Gary Younge at Howard Assembly Room and Jamaica’s Poet Laureate Olive Senior in conversation with the UK’s Poet Laureate Simon Armitage, at the same venue. The poetry superstars were part of Out of Many Lit, a 5-day literature festival which brought together lauded writers of Caribbean heritage including Sara Collins, Tanya Shirley, Courttia Newland, Roger Robinson, Kerry Young, Raymond Antrobus and Alex Wheatle, as well as Kwame Dawes, co-founder of Jamaica's famed Calabash International Literary Festival.  

The Festival also put the community at its heart with Pass It On, which saw young people showcase their responses to conversations with first-generation West Indian elders as well as the Out of Many Community Choir who performed reggae classics at a Pop-up West Indian Front Room Party at Victoria Gardens in August and on stage at the Playhouse.    

Thanks to National Lottery players, the Out of Many Festival is made possible by  The National Lottery Heritage Fund, and Arts Council England, as well as other generous  funders and supporters.  

Check back on Leeds Inspired to find out details of the forthcoming Out of Many Festival events.