OxLEP presents: How can our globally-recognised city and county’s creative and cultural assets help drive a vibrant post-Covid-19 creative economy?

Creative Industries Festival logo showing a series of lights on strings and the festival dates, 24-27 May

Register here.

In 2021, the creative industries face a series of urgent challenges. How can cultural activity recover from the long period of dormancy enforced by lockdown? What kinds of relationships will audiences build with producers as culture shifts radically online? And how can creative institutions respond to calls for greater diversity both in terms of their output and their workforce?

Oxford Brookes Creative Industries Research and Innovation Network is proud to present a month of virtual seminars, workshops and discussions which engage with these and many other vital issues facing today’s cultural creators. The Creative Industries Festival 2021 brings together practitioners, policy-makers and researchers from a range of sectors including music, film, the visual arts, and high-tech artificial intelligence. Brookes researchers and students will have opportunities to bring their work to a wider audience, to build new relationships between the University and its external partners, and to help shape the future of creativity in the UK and beyond.

In this session from OxLEP, Given that one of the first effective Coronavirus vaccines was created in Oxford, how can our world-leading creative and cultural assets build on this global spotlight to create consumer confidence in returning to 'normal life'?

John Newbigin OBE: London Mayor's Ambassador for the Creative Industries & Founder and first Chairman of Creative England

Guy Gadney: Founder & CEO of Charisma.ai and Chair of the Board at the Old Fire Station

Dr Victoria McGuinness: Head of Cultural Programming and Partnerships, Humanities, University of Oxford

Find the full Creative Industries Festival 2021 programme here.