Ep.89 Whiteknights Studio Trail: How to Build a Successful Event from Scratch

With Jenny Halstead

Episode Description:

This episode features Jenny Halstead, a painter, illustrator, and organiser, who discusses the history and logistical execution of the Whiteknights Studio Trail. Jenny shares her journey of launching the trail 26 years ago with co-founders Susanna Beer and Pip Hall to combat the lack of exhibition spaces in Reading, highlighting how the event has evolved into an annual walking tour. She emphasises that a truly successful community event is one built on clear objectives, simple systems, and a dedicated core of participants who are personally invested from day one.

The conversation explores the structural and operational timelines necessary to run a seamless community art trail. Jenny explains her deliberate shift in managing the trail’s scale: rather than allowing unmanaged growth, she prioritises a strict January selection process that balances a reliable core group with 50% new talent to maintain high standards and keep the walking route manageable. She also details the financial and administrative strategies used to encourage commitment, such as charging artist subscriptions to guarantee deadline compliance and securing long-term sponsorship from the University of Reading.

Finally, the discussion covers Jenny’s upcoming projects, including her creative contributions to the June 2026 arts trail, where she will display landscapes, sketchbooks, and collaborative dinosaur illustrations tied to Reading’s Summer Dino Trail. She concludes by encouraging listeners and local business owners to stop shying away from unique collaborations, reminding them that “if you don’t ask, you don’t get,” and urges aspiring organisers to confidently pursue their own event ideas.

Whiteknights Studio Trail: studiotrail.co.uk/

Jenny Halstead’s Website: jennyhalstead.co.uk/

Whiteknights Studio Trail Social Channels: 

The Whiteknights Studio Trail 2026 in on Saturday 13th and Sunday 14th July.

Find out more about the trail, including exhibiting artists and a map:

Whiteknights Studio Trail Website

Listen to the episode

Episode Time Codes

00:00 Welcome!

00:26 What is Whiteknights Studio Trail

00:55 How the trail came about and how it’s kept fresh every year.

03:58 Steps needed to set up the trail

05:14 Funding the trail: University of Reading sponsorship and artist subscriptions

05:56 How the University of Reading sponsorship started

07:01 How Jenny has avoided big challenges in running the Whiteknights trail/advice for people wanting to organise a trail

09:29 Advice for businesses/artists who want to collaborate

11:30 If you don’t ask, you don’t get!: Jenny’s Harris Garden collaboration

14:21 What Jenny is showing on the 2026 arts trail

15:18 Purpose of the Whiteknights Art Trail & communication tips for businesses

16:24 Jenny’s dinosaur cards connected to the Reading summer trail

17:42 University of Reading centenary exhibition popup on Whiteknights Summer Trail

18:42 How Jenny can keep people on track and to deadlines for the summer trail

19:49 Jenny’s plans for the trail moving forwards

20:58 Jenny’s step by step guide on how to set up your own event

22:34 Funding: allow enough time before your event to apply for funding

23:01 Consider what’s free and what’s paid

24:04 Jenny’s final thoughts

Videos

Give Audiences a Look Behind The Scenes!

If You Don't Ask, You Don't Get!

Jenny's Advice on Getting Started

Key takeaways

The “If You Don’t Ask, You Don’t Get” Rule for Growth

You cannot expand your business or your event by waiting for opportunities to come to you. Jenny’s success with her illustrated book and subsequent museum exhibition happened purely because she approached potential partners with a good idea. Whether it is pitching an empty wall space to a local business or securing a major sponsorship, taking the initiative costs nothing and can unlock massive collaborative value.

Connect Deeper by Sharing Your “Behind-the-Scenes” Process

True customer connection happens when you look past the finished product and invite people into your journey. By putting out raw sketchbooks and communicating the real decisions, mistakes, and tools behind the art, Jenny turns a passive viewing experience into an interactive educational moment. Business owners can replicate this by showcasing their own back-end processes to build trust, spark conversation, and engage their audience on a human level.

Secure Team Commitment by Ditching “Free”

If you want an event or collaboration to run smoothly, people need to be personally invested. Jenny emphasises that charging participants a small subscription fee completely shifts their mindset. Unlike free events where people often sign up but easily drop out, a minor financial commitment keeps your team motivated, holds them accountable, and ensures everyone hits their deadlines on time.

References

You can purchase Jenny’s Harris Garden Project Book on Amazon, or your preferred bookseller: 

Halstead, J. (2013) An Artist’s Year in the Harris Garden. Two Rivers Press. 

You can purchase Jenny’s Harris Garden Project Book on Amazon, or your preferred bookseller:

Halstead, J. (ed) (2020) The Art and History of Whiteknights. Two Rivers Press.