Hull has several museums of national importance. The city has a theatrical tradition with some famous actors and writers having been born and lived in Hull. The city's arts and heritage have played a role in attracting visitors and encouraging tourism in recent efforts at regeneration. Hull has a diverse range of architecture and this is complemented by parks and squares and a number of statues and modern sculptures. The city has inspired author
Val Wood who has set many of her best-selling novels in the city. The Wilberforce Lecture and award of the Wilberforce Medallion, which has taken place annually since 1995, celebrates the historic role of Hull and
William Wilberforce in combating the abuse of human rights. reaching the shortlist of four in June 2013 along with
Dundee,
Leicester and
Swansea Bay. On 20 November 2013,
Maria Miller, the
Culture Secretary, announced that Hull had won the award to become the
UK City of Culture 2017.
Monopoly have released a version focusing on Hull, with attractions such as the Deep and St Stephens included.
Museums The Museums Quarter is a development on the
High Street in the heart of the Old Town. It combines four museums around a leisure garden. The work cost £5.1 million and was carried out from 1998 to 2003, being formally opened by the
Duke of Gloucester. The Museums are
Wilberforce House, the birthplace of
William Wilberforce (1759–1833), the
British politician,
abolitionist and
social reformer; the
Arctic Corsair, a
deep-sea trawler that was converted to a museum ship in 1999, on the adjacent
River Hull; the
Hull and East Riding Museum, showing the archaeology and history of the region; and the
Streetlife Museum of Transport, which includes a sizeable collection of vintage cars, preserved public transport vehicles and horse-drawn carriages. and
The Deep, a
public aquarium.
Art and galleries The civic art gallery is the
Ferens Art Gallery on Queen Victoria Square, a Grade II listed building. It is named after
Thomas Ferens who provided the funds for it. Other galleries include the three-storey
Humber Street Gallery, in the former Fruit Market building which was opened in 2017 as part of Hull City of Culture. There are other smaller exhibition spaces.
Creations Marine painter
John Ward (1798–1849) was born, worked and died in Hull and a leading ship artist of his day. Artist and Royal Academician
David Remfry (born 1942) grew up in Hull and studied at the Hull College of Art (now part of Lincoln University) from 1959 to 1964. His tutor, Gerald T Harding, trained at the Royal College of Art, London and was awarded the Abbey Minor Travelling Scholarship in 1957 by the British School in Rome. Remfry has had two solo exhibitions at the Ferens Art Gallery in 1975 and 2005. and Hull's Paragon Interchange has a statue of
Philip Larkin, the latter unveiled on 2 December 2010. In 2010 a public art event in Hull city centre entitled
Larkin with Toads displayed 40 individually decorated giant toad models as the centrepiece of the
Larkin 25 festival. Most of these sculptures have since been sold off for charity and transported to their new owners. In recent years a number of modern art sculptures and heritage trails have been installed around Hull. These include a figure looking out to the
Humber called 'Voyage' which has a twin in Iceland. In July 2011, this artwork was reported stolen. There is a shark sculpture outside
The Deep and a fountain and installation called 'Tower of Light' outside Britannia House on the corner of Spring Bank. The Seven Seas Fish Trail marks Hull's fishing heritage, leading its followers through old and new sections of the city, following a wide variety of sealife engraved in the pavement. Running along Spring Bank there is also an elephant trail, with stone pavers carved by a local artist to the designs of members of the community. This trail commemorates the Victorian Zoological Gardens and the route taken daily by the elephant as it walked from its house down Spring Bank to the zoo and back, stopping for gingerbread at a shop on the way. The animals are further represented on the Albany Street 'Home Zone' a project involving local residents and resulting in sculptures of a hippo ('Water Horse') at the bottom of Albany Street; an elephant balancing on its trunk on an island in the middle; and two bears climbing poles and reaching out to each other to form an open archway across the entrance to Albany Street from Spring Bank. Other sculptural details of animals along the street represent the participation of street residents, either through workshops with artists and makers, or through independent work of their own. In 2019 a series of blue plaques appeared around Hull as part of the
Alternative Heritage project. The art project was designed to celebrate the little known and quirky facts that make Hull the city it is. A variety of tongue in cheek and humorous blue plaques appeared over night celebrating everything from Chip Spice to
James Venn to
The Beautiful South. New plaques continue to appear on a regular basis and their content has occasionally divided opinion in the city. The "Dead Bod", a graffito originally painted on the Alexandria Dock, became a local landmark. It is now located in the Humber Street Gallery. Built by 1963 and later home to
BHS, the building closed in 2016 with the collapse of BHS retail stores and was scheduled for demolition due to
asbestos content. The building was listed as
Grade II after lobbying by local pressure group Hull Heritage Action Group, potentially preventing demolition of the mural-wall. Specialist spraying to seal the building's internal structure has enabled moves to determine the actual level of asbestos in the mural-wall itself and provided a possible solution to incorporate the wall into a new development.
Theatres The city has two main theatres.
Hull New Theatre, which opened in 1939, with a £16 million refurbishment in 2016–17, is the largest venue which features musicals, opera, ballet, drama, children's shows and pantomime. The
Hull Truck Theatre is a smaller independent theatre, established in 1971, that regularly features plays, notably those written by
John Godber. Since April 2009, the Hull Truck Theatre has had a new £14.5 million, 440 seat venue in the
St Stephen's Hull development. This replaced the former home of the Hull Truck Theatre on Spring Street, a complex of buildings demolished in 2011. The playwright
Alan Plater was brought up in Hull and was associated with Hull Truck Theatre. Hull has produced several veteran stage and TV actors. Sir
Tom Courtenay,
Ian Carmichael and
Maureen Lipman were born and brought up in Hull. Younger actors
Reece Shearsmith and
Debra Stephenson were also born in Hull. In 1914, there were 29
cinemas in Hull but most of these have now closed. The first purpose-built cinema was the Prince's Hall in George Street which was opened in 1910 by Hull's theatre magnate,
William Morton. It was subsequently renamed the Curzon. On 25 July 2018, a new 3,000 seat
arena was opened to the public in the centre of the city. It was officially opened on 20 August 2018, with a
Van Morrison concert.
Festivals The Humber Mouth literature festival is an annual event and the 2012 season featured artists such as
John Cooper Clarke,
Kevin MacNeil and
Miriam Margolyes. The annual Hull Jazz Festival takes place around the
Marina area for a week at the beginning of August. From 2008 Hull has also held its
Freedom Festival, an annual free arts and
live music event that celebrates freedom in all its forms. Performers have included
Pixie Lott,
JLS and
Martha Reeves and The Vandellas,
Public Service Broadcasting and
The 1975 as well as featuring a torchlight procession, local bands like The Talks and Happy Endings from Fruit Trade Music label and a Ziggy Stardust photo exhibition including photos of the late-Hull-born
Mick Ronson who worked with
David Bowie. Former United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan was awarded the Wilberforce Medallion at the 2017 festival. The city's
Pride in Hull festival is one of the largest free-to-attend LGBT+ Pride events in the UK, attracting in excess of 50,000 attendees. Headline performers have included
Adore Delano,
Louise Redknapp,
Marc Almond,
Nadine Coyle of
Girls Aloud, and
B*Witched. The Hull Global Food Festival held its third annual event in the city's Queen Victoria Square for three days – 4–6 September 2009. According to officials, the event in 2007 attracted 125,000 visitors and brought some £5 million in revenue to the area. In 2007 the Hull Metalfest began in the Welly Club, it featured major label bands from the United States, Canada and Italy, as well as the UK. The first
Hull Comedy Festival, which included performers such as
Stewart Lee and
Russell Howard was held in 2007. In 2010, Hull marked the 25th anniversary of the death of the poet Philip Larkin with the
Larkin 25 Festival. This included the popular
Larkin with Toads public art event. The 40 Larkin toads were displayed around Hull and later sold off in a charity auction. A charity appeal raised funds to cast a life-size bronze statue of Philip Larkin, to a design by Martin Jennings, at
Hull Paragon Interchange. The statue was unveiled at a ceremony attended by the Lord Mayor of Hull on 2 December 2010, the 25th anniversary of Larkin's death. In 2013, from 29 April to 5 May, Hull Fashion Week took place with various events happening in venues in and around Hull's City centre. It finished with a finale on 5 May at
Hull Paragon Interchange, when recently reformed pop group
Atomic Kitten appeared in a celebrity fashion show. The first Yellow Day Hull event, organised by Hull-born Preston Likely, was staged on 24 June 2017. Likely invited everybody in the city to participate in the event, encouraging all participants to either wear, carry or make something yellow in order to celebrate the city's history and culture. On 3 August 2013, the second Humber Street Sesh Festival took place celebrating local music talent and arts, with several stages showcasing bands and artists from the Fruit Trade Music Label, Humber Street Sesh and Purple Worm Records. The festival has taken place yearly, with the exception of 2021 where the festival took place in September being renamed 'Inner City Sesh' and taking place in
Queens Gardens. In 2018, the 16th
Pride in Hull festival saw attendees take part in the annual celebration of LGBT+ culture.
Charity Kingston is home to the charity group
The Society of M.I.C.E., modelled after the
Grand Order of Water Rats. MICE stands for Men In Charitable Endeavour. ==Cultural references==