Growing our Suffolk Cultural Strategy: Connecting People with Place Symposium
- Date
- 11 September 2024
- -
- 11 September 2024
- Time
- 9.30 AM–5.30 PM
- Location
- The Hold, Ipswich, IP4 1LN
This inaugural event, sponsored by the University’s Centre for Culture and Heritage and The Hold — Suffolk County Archives, provides a flagship forum to bring together both larger institutional stakeholders as well as voluntary organisations across the region who have a passion for preserving and growing greater public awareness of the county, its towns, and communities.
Suffolk’s history and contemporary cultural landscapes run deep. As heritage and cultural educators, we wish to bring current cultural strategies for the region to life, foster connections between organisations, people, and place, and discuss strategic approaches for developing Suffolk’s culture and heritage into the mid-21st century.
Key Questions:
- As stakeholders and guardians of the future of Suffolk’s Arts and Heritage sector, how do we encourage and support a collective sharing of ideas, experience and capabilities?
- What are the cultural strategies that empower our communities to generate creativity, impact, and innovation?
- How can we harness our strengths to best engage the wider public with our historic and contemporary culture now and into the future?
Agenda
9.30–10.00am
Registration, exhibition space
Tea and coffee available
10.00–10.15am
Keynote
Professor Jenny Higham, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Suffolk
10.15am–12.30pm (Coffee break 11.00-11.30am)
Dialogue session (morning)
How collaboration and partnerships bring cultural strategies to life: Discussing approaches across Suffolk.
- Jayne Austin — Association for Suffolk Museums and Norfolk and Suffolk Culture Board: an overview of local and regional strategic partnerships
- Janet Perry — Developing an east Suffolk cultural strategy: How collaboration and partnership bring cultural strategies to life
- Zoey Banthorpe — Mid Suffolk and Babergh Culture, Heritage and Visitor Economy strategy: shaping strategy across the three sectors
- Judith Berry — Suffolk County Council Archives: Working across Suffolk to build our heritage
12.30–1.30pm
Catered lunch
1.30–3.30pm (Coffee break 2.30-2.45pm)
Dialogue session (afternoon)
Thriving together: addressing challenges as well as future opportunities for innovation, funding and public engagement in the arts and heritage sector.
- Kath Cockshaw — Lessons learned from Wolsey 550
- Associate Professor Mike Sauter — Building heritage in Ipswich
- Ben Osborne — Music and cultural heritage
- Marcus Harris-Noble — Music ecosystems, the creative industries and how they can support the development of the wider local economy
- Iona Hodgson — Urban art: Wild walls
- Professor Emma Bond — The Civic University and our public engagement in arts and heritage
3.30–4.15pm
Plenary
Future collaboration for Suffolk: An exchange of ideas
4.15–5.30pm
Reception
Refreshments and networking
Speakers
Jayne Austin
Jayne Austin is the Museum Lead at Suffolk County Council and Secretary of the Association of Suffolk Museums, working with all museums in Suffolk and partners across the region. She has worked in the heritage sector for over 25 years and is experienced at bringing together different sector organisations, fundraising, and enabling a range of projects and programmes. Jayne is also a board member at Eastern Angles Theatre Company which presents and tours regional stories from the East of England.
Janet Perry
Janet has worked for East Suffolk Council for 6 months, in this new role, to lead culture strategy for East Suffolk. She has worked in the voluntary sector for a number of years, including working for the National Trust. Janet is chair of the local Good Neighbour Scheme and funding coordinator for a local Scout group. Janet has a breadth of experience working in community development, governance, volunteer management, heritage, fundraising and youth work.
Judith Berry
Judith Berry is the Acting Strategic Manager for Suffolk Archives, part of Suffolk County Council. She has worked in the archives sector for 23 years, starting her career in Suffolk in 2004 as the archivist at the Bury St Edmunds branch. Her current role involves managing and overseeing all aspects of the Suffolk Archives service, including the nationally recognised audience development programme.
Zoey Banthorpe
Zoey Banthorpe is the Arts and Culture Lead at Babergh and Mid Suffolk Council with several years' experience working in project management, event delivery, marketing, audience development and helping to increase more cultural infrastructure. She has a strong interest in promoting diversity, inclusion and collaboration throughout the industry.
Ben Osborne
Ben Osborne is a DJ, writer, curator and driving force behind the Noise of Art, a collective which marries electronic music with the performing arts, film, and other visual media.
Mike Sauter
Dr. Michael Sauter is Associate Professor of History at the University of Suffolk. He is a historian of early modern Europe, with specialisations in intellectual history and the history of science. He completed his BA at Drew University (magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa), his MA at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and his PhD at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Emma Bond
Professor Emma Bond is Pro Vice-Chancellor Research & Knowledge Exchange and Professor of Socio-Technical Research at the University of Suffolk. As Pro Vice-Chancellor R&KE, Emma is a key member of our University’s Executive and Senior Leadership Team and has a significant role in driving the research agenda across the entire institution. She has overall responsibility for the Research & Knowledge Exchange Directorate and the University’s research strategy. Emma is leading the University’s preparation for a successful 2027/8 future REF submission and in achieving RDAP by 2025.
Marcus Harris-Noble
Marcus brings a proven track record in engaging with individuals, groups and organisations to design and deliver evidence - based strategic approaches for effecting positive change through education and collaboration in both community and corporate settings. He is a creative industries digital technology specialist with a passion for empowering individuals and communities to tell their stories through culture and create their futures through economic activity. He currently manages Croydon’s Creative Enterprise Zone programme and sits on the leadership board of the South London Partnership Creative Cluster.
Kath Cockshaw
Kath is a cultural placemaking whizz, currently managing the ‘Thomas Wolsey 550’ project in Ipswich. She started out as an art historian, gaining a first-class honours degree at Winchester School of Art, and went on to become a museum's curator, then a freelance curator and producer in London. As Head of Museums and Arts for Waltham Forest Borough Council from 2017, she ran the highly acclaimed William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow, and went on to head up Markshall, a large rural estate in north Essex until 2022. Before moving to London, Kath worked in Bristol for several years, where she was heavily involved with the city’s world-class street art scene, managing exhibitions and place-changing initiatives. Kath is also a board member for Creative Colchester and a non-exec director for Eco-Attractions CIC, founded by Eden Project and Kew.
Iona Hodgson
With over 25 years' experience in creative production and project management, Iona delivers impactful creativity within public and private sectors. Her socially engaged work includes delivering funded community arts programmes centered around collaboration and visual arts and her commercial work as a freelancer sees her coordinating a dynamic range of projects and events for her clients across the creative industry.
As the co-founder of Ipswich based Community Arts organisation Art Eat Events CIC, Iona is currently managing the delivery of a large town wide mural and visual arts programme called Wild Walls Festival. She is passionate about supporting engagement with visual arts and creative activities as a community development strategy as well as delivering high calibre aspirational visual arts projects.