Echoes from the Birdcage

Echoes from the Birdcage is the world premiere of a new composition to emerge from Dame Evelyn Glennie’s time as the PRS Foundation and King’s Cross Musician in Residence, written by Jill Jarman in collaboration with Dame Evelyn Glennie. An amazing sound world is created by percussionist Evelyn Glennie with an ensemble of musicians, to bring to life the sounds and emotions of the transformation of King’s Cross.

Memento – Poet in the City and Aurora Orchestra

King's Place 90 York Way, London, United Kingdom

New technologies are poised to revolutionise computer memory, unlocking huge potential benefits for global society. This special interdisciplinary event explores our relationship with memory, with reflections from experimental physicist Stuart Parkin; and a performance of newly commissioned poetry and music by Frances Leviston and Martin Suckling.

Knowledge Quarter Introduction to Networking Masterclass

The British Library 96 Euston Rd, Kings Cross , London , United Kingdom

Networking is an essential skill in the 21st century workforce yet many of us find it daunting and stressful. As the world becomes ever more connected, so should any organisation seeking to be innovative, and to work with diverse partners in new and creative ways.

Free

“Caste discrimination in the UK” Documentary screening and discussion

Stanley Building 7 Pancras Square, King’s Cross, London, United Kingdom

The caste system has been a source of much debate in South Asia. But what happens when British Indians say caste discrimination has followed them overseas? Caste Aside is a documentary about the British government's controversial decision to introduce legislation against caste discrimination in the UK.

Free

“Dangers and Delusions”? Perspectives on the women’s suffrage movement.

UCL main library 23-25 Gower St, Kings Cross, London

Displaying items from UCL Special Collections, this exhibition examines the actions and reactions attending the women's suffrage movement from the 1860s up to the Representation of the People Act 1918. Satirical commentaries including Laurence Housman's Anti-Suffrage Alphabet are set alongside campaign literature and petitions for and against legislative change.

Free

Knowledge Quarter Private View: The Lost Words at the Foundling Museum

The Knowledge Quarter (KQ) is delighted to invite staff and friends from KQ organisations to the next in our series of private breakfast views. It will be on this occasion hosted at the Foundling Museum, you will have the opportunity to have an exclusive look at 'The Lost Words' exploring the relationship between language and the living world through an exhibition of poetry and illustration.

Free

KQ Private View ‘Harry Potter: A History of Magic’ at the British Library

The British Library 96 Euston Rd, Kings Cross , London , United Kingdom

The Knowledge Quarter is delighted to invite staff from Knowledge Quarter organisations to the next in our series of private breakfast views. It will be on this occasion hosted at the British Library. KQ staff and partner organisations will have the opportunity to have an exclusive look at Harry Potter: A History of Magic; the British Library's blockbuster exhibition during its closing weeks.

Free

Over My Shoulder

St Paul’s Church Wilton Place, Knightsbridge, London, United Kingdom

This project derives from from a curious connection between two very different and fascinating singers. Elisabeth Schumann, international classical diva, and Jessie Matthews, darling of the 1930s stage and screen, are buried in the same West London churchyard. Each of these women was hugely famous in her day, reaching the very peak of the performing profession, and yet their names are hardly recognised now by younger generations of music-lovers.

Bach, the Universe & Everything – Seeing Life in a New Light

Kings Place 90 York Way, London, United Kingdom

Bach is often praised by scientists for the intricate structures and symmetries in his music. He wrote more than 200 cantatas, a collection of vocal works which explore questions of faith, time and eternity. Taking inspiration from Douglas Adams’ quote that ‘Bach tells you what it’s like to be the universe’, this unusual series from the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and The Institute of Physics at Kings Place swaps metaphysics for physics to celebrate extraordinary universe and the music of Bach with some of Britain’s brightest scientists.

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