The Market House Festival was a ten-day series of early evening events taking place in Kingston's historic Market House between April 7th and 18th, 2008. It was funded by an award from the Coffeehouse Challenge, sponsored by the RSA, Starbucks and T-Mobile.
Thank you to everyone who organised or helped with or came to an event at the Market House. Event organisers and their friends and contacts were wonderfully generous with their time and with food and drink, helping to make events sociable as well as interesting and very varied in style. Thank you, too, to Kingston First for lots of practical help and support, and to Borders Starbucks for providing refreshments.
If you want to know what you missed, or would like to see what people did with their opportunity to use the venue, have a look at April in the Events Calendar or see the Festival flier here, and the Photo Album for some nice pictures.
Highlights and nice surprises of the second week of the Festival:
If you want to know what you missed, or would like to see what people did with their opportunity to use the venue, have a look at April in the Events Calendar or see the Festival flier here, and the Photo Album for some nice pictures.
Highlights and nice surprises of the second week of the Festival:
- The general consensus on most issues amongst the panellists at the "Faith and Atheism" discussion, and the generosity of the audience, who gave £75.33 to the charity of the evening, the Poppy Project.
- Powerful art and poetry by the residents of HESTIA Housing & Support at the Amnesty exhibition.
- Stephen Unwin's fascinating talk about the challenges of running the Rose Theatre, and its exciting new programme - pity there weren't more people to hear it!
- The robust defence of deer-culling in the Royal Parks at the talks organised by the Friends of Richmond Park and Friends of Bushy Park, and learning that muntjac deer have ferocious teeth - not to be tangled with.
- Excellent wine and food provided by Nuggs, along with advice and recipes from the professionals.
- Student journalists turning up on several evenings, on an assignment to find and report events in Kingston, and the Surrey Comet photographer turning up at others.
Highlights and nice surprises of the first week of the Festival:
- Stephen Unwin's fascinating talk about the challenges of running the Rose Theatre, and its exciting new programme - pity there weren't more people to hear it!
- The robust defence of deer-culling in the Royal Parks at the talks organised by the Friends of Richmond Park and Friends of Bushy Park, and learning that muntjac deer have ferocious teeth - not to be tangled with.
- Excellent wine and food provided by Nuggs, along with advice and recipes from the professionals.
- Student journalists turning up on several evenings, on an assignment to find and report events in Kingston, and the Surrey Comet photographer turning up at others.
Highlights and nice surprises of the first week of the Festival:
• Angela of Borders Starbucks stepping in at the last minute to do refreshments, and she and her team providing them efficiently and with no fuss every evening they were required.
• Ramnath, of Vancha Ghar Nepalese restaurant in Tolworth, turning up at the "Strictly Salsa" evening with dishes of wonderful fragrant food.
• The speed and efficiency with which the eco-stall-holders set up their various, often complicated, displays, and then dismantled them again at the end of the evening.
• Many more people than booked coming to the Julian Baggini talk, helping to make it a good-sized audience and a lively evening.
• Generous samples of Arabic, Spanish, Polish, Chinese and Hindi food accompanying the languages at the "Language Bites" evening, all brought in, laid out, and then cleared away again, by Laura’s amazing team of helpers.
• The impressive teamwork of the Tadimi family and helpers, who worked so hard to transform the Delft room into Morocco for an evening, complete with tent, food, mint tea table, lanterns, silver dishes of sweetmeats and spices – and then back again at the end of the evening.
• Ramnath, of Vancha Ghar Nepalese restaurant in Tolworth, turning up at the "Strictly Salsa" evening with dishes of wonderful fragrant food.
• The speed and efficiency with which the eco-stall-holders set up their various, often complicated, displays, and then dismantled them again at the end of the evening.
• Many more people than booked coming to the Julian Baggini talk, helping to make it a good-sized audience and a lively evening.
• Generous samples of Arabic, Spanish, Polish, Chinese and Hindi food accompanying the languages at the "Language Bites" evening, all brought in, laid out, and then cleared away again, by Laura’s amazing team of helpers.
• The impressive teamwork of the Tadimi family and helpers, who worked so hard to transform the Delft room into Morocco for an evening, complete with tent, food, mint tea table, lanterns, silver dishes of sweetmeats and spices – and then back again at the end of the evening.
The Market House Festival was intended to help to improve and diversify the evening culture of Kingston town centre by demonstrating how the community could use this central but sadly underused asset, and I hope that local individuals, community groups and business will consider using the Market House for future events. Although I don't intend to run another Festival and am unlikely to hire the Market House again myself, I'd be happy to talk to or advise anyone who would like to put on an event there.
Marilyn Mason
Director, Market House Fesival, April 2008
Director, Market House Fesival, April 2008
Do something different in Kingston after work or shopping - learn something new, talk about something new, meet new people...