Everything you need to know about Durham's Lumiere festival 2023

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now
The bi-annual light festival returns in November.

It's one of the most spectacular events on the North East's culture calendar - and excitement is building for what's being billed as the biggest Lumiere yet.


Do You See Words In Rainbows?’, Chila Burman. Covent Garden Market. Image courtesy of Covent Garden










Do You See Words In Rainbows?’, Chila Burman. Covent Garden Market. Image courtesy of Covent Garden
Do You See Words In Rainbows?’, Chila Burman. Covent Garden Market. Image courtesy of Covent Garden

More than 40 installations will be lighting up Durham for the return of the bi-annual festival, which takes place this year from November 16-19, from 4.30pm-11pm each night.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Each night, the city and the wider county will become a nocturnal art experience hosting works made with light on its streets, bridges, buildings and river; from iconic locations like the bustling Market Place, to Durham Cathedral’s UNESCO World Heritage site, historic Bishop Auckland town centre and the prestigious Durham University campus.

Fourteen years after Lumiere debuted in Durham, and more than one million visitors later, it is now the UK’s first light art biennial, a global event with artists from 15 different countries exhibiting their artwork completely free for the public.

Installations that will transform Durham include 16 new commissions and 7 UK debuts, ranging from local North East artists and schools and communities as well as group collectives and global artists prominent in the light art movement.

This year's line-up

Durham Cathedral


'Pulse Topology', Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. Photo by Jonathan Gazze


'Pulse Topology', Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. Photo by Jonathan Gazze
'Pulse Topology', Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. Photo by Jonathan Gazze

Within the building, two internationally-acclaimed artists will exhibit UK premieres. Montréal-based Mexican artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s colossal immersive work Pulse Topology will transform the Cathedral nave.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Shown at Superblue Basel and Miami, this site-specific edition will become the pulsing heart of Lumiere as thousands of light bulbs, activated by the recorded heartbeat of visitors, create a connective array of glimmering lights. With every new participant, a new pulse is added to the canopy, keeping the work constantly in flux.

On display in the Cathedral’s 11th century Chapter House will be Ai Weiwei’s Illuminated Bottle Rack, the Chinese artist’s monumental work comprising of 61 antique chandeliers, inspired by Marcel Duchamp, which uses an enormous, upside-down bottle rack as its chandelier branches.


‘Illuminated Bottle Rack’, Ai Weiwei ©. Image courtesy of Ai Weiwei Studio.


‘Illuminated Bottle Rack’, Ai Weiwei ©. Image courtesy of Ai Weiwei Studio.
‘Illuminated Bottle Rack’, Ai Weiwei ©. Image courtesy of Ai Weiwei Studio.

The Cathedral cloister will be the site of a new commission by US artist Adam Frelin. Inner Cloister replicates the shape and scale of the cloister arches that light in sequence, mirroring the passage of the visitors as they walk around the courtyard in the footsteps of the monks of old.

Outside the Cathedral on Palace Green, Spanish artist Javier Riera will create an immersive series of three-dimensional projections titled Liquid Geometry, one of three commissions supported by Durham University. Visitors will be able to walk amongst and underneath the mind- bending geometric shapes that Riera creates, exploring the hidden qualities and dimensions in the buildings surrounding Durham Cathedral.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

St Mary's College grounds


‘Sacral’, Edoardo Tresoldi.


‘Sacral’, Edoardo Tresoldi.
‘Sacral’, Edoardo Tresoldi.

In a UK first, Italian artist Edoardo Tresoldi brings his work Sacral to the grounds of St Mary’s College. Tracing the outline of Durham Cathedral in the distance, the work is an ethereal sculpture viewed from the terrace of St Mary’s College.

Durham University

Universal Loom by one of the most in-demand contemporary artists of recent years, Daniel Canogar, in his second commission for Lumiere.


‘Universal Loom’, Daniel Canogar. 


‘Universal Loom’, Daniel Canogar. 
‘Universal Loom’, Daniel Canogar. 

Canogar’s artwork is inspired by conversations with Professor Carlos Frenk of Durham University’s Institute for Computational Cosmology around the controversial string theory.

Canogar will use custom-made software to apply a digital woven fabric onto the very building in which these scientific theories are researched and debated.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

River Wear

Themes of science and physics continue in a new commission by British duo Shuster +Moseley, who regularly work with neuro-scientists and engineers.

Responding to Sir Isaac Newton’s prism experiment and engineered using geometric optics, Body of Light will create a specular rainbow across the iconic River Wear via a huge glass prism hand-cast in the Czech Republic and weighing 240 kg.

Also on the river, Constellations by French artist Joanie Lemercier, will take visitors on a cosmic journey through the universe featuring three-dimensional planets, stars and deep into the interior of a black hole.

Market Place

Chila Burman MBE, will exhibit a joyful, new commission, Hurts So Good, comprising of new and existing works that reference a range of issues and ideas including Indian mythology, female empowerment and Britain’s colonial legacy.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Prince Bishops Place loading bay

Architecture Social Club, a collective of British designers, technicians and poets, will take over the loading bay in Prince Bishops Place, a new industrial setting for Lumiere. Parallels makes a space for pure escapism with pulsating light beams, lasers and a soundtrack by Max Cooper.

Masonic Hall

Multi-media artist Emma Allen returns to the city with Colourful Chaos, creating a playful projection on the striking façade of Durham’s Masonic Hall with a cast of animated characters who tumble, climb and paint across this historic structure.

Across the city

Visitors can look out for a series of playful neon installations, Emotional Weather, a new commission by UK artist Aidan Moesby, that reflects the relationship between physical and emotional journeys. With giant symbols typically used in weather forecasts, each work is set where people begin or end a journey.

St Oswald's Churchyard

Signed Light, located in St Oswald’s Churchyard is by UK artist Martin Glover. Drawing on a passion for education around British Sign Language, the work consists of five signs fingerspelling the word ‘Light’, encouraging viewers to learn the basics of BSL.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Walkergate

Un-reel Access by Kappa (Kaori & Patrick Jones), a door fixture with light attempting to burst through at Walkergate.

Prebends Bridge

Gareth Hudson’s Panta Rhei combines choral singing and light in a visual symphony at Prebends Bridge; and Seaham-based Angela Sandwith’s Ghost Nest, which sends a message about the environment with an illuminated work comprised of repurposed discarded fishing gear from East Durham beaches.

Court Lane

Located in a city street lamp, Chomko & Rosier’s award-winning, global work Shadowing in Court Lane is a mischievous installation that captures and remembers movements by passers-by, encouraging audiences to perform, dance and play before their movements are echoed back to the next visitor.#

South Bailey

In the historic cobbled South Bailey, French light-art studio Pitaya will fill the sky with a new galaxy of hand-sculpted planets. PLANETOÏDS is a dream-like experience that has previously been exhibited at the Fête des Lumières in Lyon.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Durham College

Yinka Ilori MBE, known for his use of bright colours is bringing In Plants We Trust to the North East of England for the first time. The artist’s shrine to plants that thrive in urban settings was first produced in 2021 to reflect his native London, and will now interact with the natural world and city atmosphere of Durham College.

Framwellgate Bridge

Suspended beneath Framwellgate Bridge will be German artist Anselm Reyle’s neon installation Untitled, comprising of leftover tubes from industrial and urban spaces to create a nostalgic retro reflection in the river.

And, legendary UK visual artist Anne Bean will bring her autobiographical Reflect to Durham, one of several critically-acclaimed UK-based artists who will be exhibiting and installing work at Lumiere.

Pennyferry Bridge

Lampounette is the latest addition to the permanent collection of light installations in Durham: a giant iconic desk lamp by French studio TILT that will light up the area around Pennyferry Bridge in its new Durham home.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad