June 12, 2026
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Culture

Portland Fair brought back to life as b-side festival reveals 2026 line-up

A black and white archive photograph of Portland Fair showing two women laughing on the dodgems. The woman driving has dark curled hair and dangling earrings, her mouth open mid-laugh as she grips the white steering wheel, while her blonde companion smiles beside her. Behind them, a fairground worker in a dark shirt steps between the bumper cars, and children can be seen riding in other cars across the rink. A man walks past the painted boards at the edge of the ride, with strings of lights and fairground signage visible above. The photograph captures the joy and atmosphere of the much-missed fair, held in Chiswell every November 5 for more than 200 years until it ended in 2001.

The ghosts of Portland Fair are to be evoked as the island’s b-side festival returns this September.

The annual celebration of creativity is this year looking to embrace the island’s oddness, and otherness under the title of That Other Place.

Eleven artists have been commissioned to conjure up a parallel Portland, familiar but off kilter, where the fair’s ghost can be heard, felt, and walked through. The work runs across public spaces throughout the Underhill area, free and open to all, from September 9 to 13.

15:51 Two fairground workers manoeuvre a dodgem car into position at Portland Fair in Chiswell. The bumper car has a metallic silver and blue body with red detailing, and one young man in a green jumper with a bandaged hand pushes from behind while another in a grey t-shirt, baseball cap and jeans reaches across to steady the steering wheel. Yellow painted boards with fairground signage frame the ride, and the rooftops and windows of Chiswell's houses are visible behind them under an overcast sky. The photograph captures the working life of the travelling fair that visited the island every November until 2001.

For more than 200 years, every November 5 Chiswell filled with rides, music, and all the suspended unreality of a travelling show. Portland Fair ended in 2001. The island has felt its absence since.

How 11 artists will bring Portland Fair back to life

Buried Giants (Tim Powell and Hannah Price) bring back the fair through sound. Echoes of Portland Fair uses binaural audio technology to place visitors inside three dimensional soundscapes – the ghost train, the Ferris wheel, snatches of conversation, accessed via smartphone and headphones.

Gavin Morris provides a digital funfair in Light Hearted: a giant LED heart, 2.4 metres wide, that only illuminates when two or more people hold hands to complete a circuit. It’s a fairground trick updated for the present, a piece that quite literally shows what connection looks like.

Dawn Parsonage and Peter Hudson (Light Space Color) work with local people and festival goers to create And So Our Shadows Dance – a series of shadow projections cast across Portland’s buildings at dusk, built from workshop-made cut-outs inspired by the fair’s archive and the memories of those who attended it. The shadows spin, dance, and tell stories the Portland Fair left behind.

Deborah Bowness, who showed at b-side 2024, returns with Walls Are Talking – a paper trail of trompe l’oeil paste-ups through Underhill, beginning at Fair Field and winding down through Chiswell. Optical illusions, archive imagery, and reimagined fair ephemera bend the streets into a walking journey through a Portland that might have been.

A black and white archive photograph of a sweet stall at Portland Fair, its hand-painted sign lit by rows of bulbs and advertising genuine gingerbreads, fairings and brandy snaps. A woman in a light cardigan serves behind the counter, which is piled with bags of sweets, while women in dark coats and children gather in front of the stall. To the left hang balloons and bundles of fairground treats, with a sign offering almond nougat three for half a crown. A young girl in a knitted jumper stands in the foreground, and the buildings of Chiswell can be glimpsed behind the stall's awning. The photograph captures the traditional fairground food stalls that drew islanders to the fair each November.

Helen Grant builds Plucky Dip: a working scale model of a Scotch derrick crane – the kind once used across Portland’s quarries – repurposed as a fairground grabber over a ball pit full of handmade lucky charms. It’s absurdist, participatory, and centred on the island’s industrial past.

Chloe Mantripp, with collaborators Mike McCallum and Ruby LeStrange, leads a guided ramble through Portland’s landscape with three otherworldly performer-musicians: the Mer-Chicken, the White Hare, and the White Stag/Black Rider. The walk ends at a campfire, a storytelling, and hot chocolate, drawn from local folklore of which on Portland there are masses.

Carlos Cortes proposes Ball Run Palace, a community built, ever growing ball run that follows the contours of Portland’s landscape, echoing the old Merchant’s Railway that carried quarried stone down to Castletown. Participants are builders as much as players, assembling and decorating as they go.

Alexi Marshall will run Peculiar Arcana – two linocut tarot card workshops, one with young people designing cards about Portland’s futures, one with elders creating cards drawn from memory.

Ella Yolande will create a large textile archway – quilted with dried plants foraged from Portland itself – through which visitors can pass. A portal, a threshold, an invitation to imagine what lies just on the other side.

The Round-Up ride at Portland Fair glowing against the night sky, its great tilted wheel lit up in golden yellow lights with illuminated spokes radiating from the centre. The spinning drum is caught mid-motion, blurring the lights around its rim, and a sunburst design shines at its base above the pay booth, where hand-painted lettering reads The Sensational Round-Up. Silhouetted figures of fairgoers stand watching in the darkness below, with the metal barriers of the ride just visible in the foreground. The photograph captures the dazzling spectacle of the fair after dark, when Chiswell filled with light, noise and crowds every November.

Jane C Fox will collaborate with an animator to project hybrid figures from her Encyclopaedia Project onto Portland’s streets and opes, creatures from a world where species coexist without hierarchy, arriving at the Portland Fair as its welcoming committee.

Paul Le Keux, a Portland resident, curates Portland Parables: a live audio-visual evening in which islanders share stories including fact, fiction, memory, dialect, song, without being required to declare which is which. History, myth, and imagination sit side by side, and the audience is left to find the truth.

The other strand of b-side 2026 will see four artists in year-long residence on the island, exploring and sharing all they learn about Portland.

Director Rocca Holly-Nambi said: “That Other Place is about taking all of the otherness from this island and showing how they come together in this cacophony of colour, personality, and open-ness, a bold, living exploration of place. There’s something extraordinary in the meeting of artists, communities, and landscape here that you can’t find anywhere else.”

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