Adelaide Festival of Arts, late-summer international festival showcasing visual, performing, literary, and media arts, held every two years in Adelaide, S.Aus., Austl.

The first Adelaide Festival of Arts was held in 1960 as a result of the passionate and pioneering efforts of newspaper executive Sir Lloyd Dumas and University of Adelaide music professor John Bishop. Inspired by Scotland’s Edinburgh Festival, the two men formulated a plan and a budget to stage a similar event in Adelaide. Their idea won the support of the city’s mayor, who subsequently helped to generate funding for the festival. With the patronage of Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, and guidance from the Edinburgh Festival artistic director, Ian Hunter, who was recruited to help organize the production, the festival was launched in March. Highlights of the two-week event included performances by the Sydney Symphony, American pianist Dave Brubeck and his jazz ensemble, and the popular Hogarth Puppets from London, as well as an exhibition of the works of English landscape painter J.M.W. Turner.

Owing to the resounding success of the inaugural event, the Adelaide Festival of Arts was staged again in 1962, after which it became a regular biennial affair, with each festival offering a fresh array of traditional, contemporary, Western, and the non-Western arts. Actress Marlene Dietrich, Irish comedian Spike Milligan, the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Frankfurt Ballet, the Bayanihan dance company from the Philippines, and American salsa musician Tito Puente were among the festival’s many notable artists over the years. The festival also became host to Adelaide Writers’ Week—a major literary event featuring author talks, workshops, and panel discussions. In 1992 the first WOMAD (World of Music, Arts, and Dance) festival in Australia was held in conjunction with the Adelaide Festival of Arts, and it later became an independent event. A popular addition in 2008 was Northern Lights, a spectacular display of coloured-light artwork projected onto Adelaide’s distinctive architecture. In the 21st century the festival typically drew several hundred thousand visitors.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Virginia Gorlinski.

Quick Facts
Acronym for:
World of Music, Arts and Dance
Date:
1982 - present
Areas Of Involvement:
music festival
Related People:
Peter Gabriel

WOMAD, international music and arts foundation known primarily for its festivals, held in multiple locations across the globe each year.

WOMAD was conceived in 1980 by a group of individuals—most notably Peter Gabriel (former leader of the British rock band Genesis)—who shared a love of the world’s music traditions. The group aimed to bring a broad international spectrum of music, arts, and dance to new audiences, and in 1982 the first WOMAD music festival was held in Shepton Mallet, Somerset, Eng. The event failed to break even, however, and consequently Gabriel reunited with former Genesis bandmates, both to pay off debts and to raise money for the cause. A second event, staged the following year, was somewhat more successful and allowed for the establishment of the nonprofit WOMAD Foundation. While continuing to operate on a shoestring budget, the organization’s founders soon realized that one festival a year in the United Kingdom was not going to keep WOMAD afloat.

With a number of countries eager to host the WOMAD festival, regular events were subsequently established in the United Kingdom, Australia, Spain, the United Arab Emirates, and New Zealand. Yet other countries—such as Canada, Greece, Japan, and the United States—held WOMAD festivals on a one-time or intermittent basis. The organization grew steadily, and, within 25 years of its founding, it had hosted more than 150 festivals involving thousands of performers worldwide.

WOMAD festivals typically span an entire weekend and showcase music and dance from many regions of the world. Some performers are seasoned international touring artists with spectacular stage shows, whereas others are local favourites with a palpable connection to the audience. Most groups blend various urban popular styles with elements of traditional music, but some performers present traditional forms adjusted minimally for the international concert stage. Festival attendance varies by the size of the venue and length of the festival. At the annual events in Adelaide, S.Aus., for instance, attendance averaged more than 70,000 in the early 21st century; in New Zealand, by contrast, attendees numbered about 14,000. Aside from music and dance performances, WOMAD festivals feature food and craft vendors and offer assorted workshops and other activities for children. Ultimately, the events are intended to offer a family-friendly entertaining and educational experience to people of all ages.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Virginia Gorlinski.