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Newsletter: Events at Clare Hall, Autumn 2025

Dear Clare Hall members and friends,
Please find below a list of events taking place this week and beyond, to which you are warmly invited.

As Michaelmas begins, we invite all members of the Clare Hall community — students, fellows, staff, and families — to share photos of our beautiful grounds and gardens. Whether it is autumn colours, hidden corners, or favourite gathering spaces, we would love to see Clare Hall through your eyes.

Photos don not need to be professional — good-quality smartphone shots are very welcome. Please note that photos featuring identifiable people cannot be accepted. Selected images will be featured on a rotating display in the College Main Site, as well as on our website and social media, with full credit to the photographer. They will also be permanently preserved in the College Archives as part of our record in this milestone 60th anniversary year.

Find out more and submit your photos on the main event page.

The Betty Behrens Seminar on Classics of Historiography offers a unique opportunity for students and scholars to reflect on some great historical works and engage in discussion with renowned experts.

This term, the seminar will be composed of three meetings, taking place in the Richard Eden Suite, Clare Hall, West Court. To attend, please register via Eventbrite

Learn more about the seminar here.

Clare Hall’s Colloquia provide members of the College – especially (but not exclusively) Visiting Fellows and Life Members – with an opportunity to present their research, whether in its early stages or already published, in a friendly setting. They are a great way to discuss your ideas, meet fellow members and to contribute to our vibrant community. Sessions take place on Tuesday evenings during term time, 7:15–9:15pm, in the Clare Hall Meeting Room. Refreshments are provided.

The first session of the term is on 28 October 2025, with speaker Professor Petri Pellikka (Visiting Fellow; University of Helsinki, Finland).

Title: Climatic Impacts of Land Use and Land Cover Change in Africa – Remote Sensing and Environmental in situ Measurements in Taita Hills Kenya since 2003

Human population in sub-Saharan Africa is growing the fastest in the world, which causes a pressure on land resource together with climate change. More cropland needs to be cleared to maintain food security, but decreasing woody vegetation causes climate change. Loss of forests and woody vegetation decreases carbon sequestration from the air, carbon stocks in the above ground vegetation, and releases greenhouse gas emissions from soil. Loss of woody vegetation and trees, in general, causes increased land surface temperature, and air temperature as a consequence. University of Helsinki has been studying this phenomena in Africa using Taita Taveta County in Kenya as a test site and model for whole sub-Saharan Africa applying remote sensing data and environmental sensing network. We are also developing climate-smart agriculture and livestock management to mitigate climate change, but secure food. We have also established Taita Research Station in the middle of the Taita Hills. 

Please see the full Michaelmas programme here.

We are delighted to present the second concert in Clare Hall’s Herschel Concert Series 2025/26, featuring the acclaimed Rossetti Ensemble in an evening of piano quartets.

Programme:

Tickets: £20 General Admission, £15 Clare Hall members, £5 students (available via Eventbrite).

If you are interested in developing your writing skills in academia and honing your essays, dissertation, job applications, proposals, and/or enhancing your research skills with Generative AI, then this is for you! 

Academic Writing and Digital/AI Research Skills Workshops by Dr Anthony Harris and Dr Wai Yi Feng will be taking place in the Clare Hall Meeting Room on 25 – 26 October 2025, 9.15am-1.15pm. Optional individual supervisions with the tutors: 2.00-5.00pm.

More information on the workshop and registration is available on the main event page.

All Clare Hall members are welcome to attend the meetings for the Biomedical and Life Sciences SIG this Michaelmas term. Meetings are held on Wednesdays 6-7pm in the Clare Hall Meeting Room.

The next talk will take place on 29 October, led by Dr Adam Reid (Head of Bioinformatics, The Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge) – “Biology as a data science”.

See the full SIG schedule on this page.

Professor Lydia Liu, Needham Research Fellow at Clare Hall, is giving a talk on Philosophical Care in AI Research on Thursday 30 October, 5-6pm, in Lecture Block Room 1, Sidgwick Site.

Abstract by Professor Liu: One of the common questions from the early days of AI research is this: What is the philosophical ground that AI requires for the kind of formalisation it must implement on the computer? AI practitioners tend to approach the issue in terms of ‘epistemology’ or ‘theories of knowledge.’ Are they confusing ‘epistemology’ with ‘intensional logic’? What exactly are the philosophical stakes in AI research? In my talk, I will tackle these questions by analysing a number of philosophical conversations among early AI pioneers, focusing in particular on the fascinating discussions that took place in the early 1970s at the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (SAIL). I hope to clarify why philosophy matters to AI beyond the limits of debate imposed by philosophers such as Hubert Dreyfus or John Searle.

This event is free and open to all. Find more information and register here.

All Clare Hall members are welcome to attend the meetings for the new Genealogy SIG this Michaelmas term. The next meeting will take place on Thursday 30 October at 7pm in the Clare Hall Meeting Room.

Please contact Kevin Edwards (email: kevin.edwards@abdn.ac.uk) for further details.

We will be holding our annual “Masters to PhD Progression Event” in the Richard Eden Suite, on Monday 3rd November from 7.00-8.30pm. The event is for current Masters students at Clare Hall to learn more about the pathway to a PhD through the experience and expertise of current PhD students, the Senior Tutor Holly Hedgeland, and the former Vice-President Helen Pennant, who is also Director of the Cambridge Trust.

Clare Hall researchers are warmly invited to Advancing Research Impact for College-Based Academics – an event jointly organised by Newnham College, Hughes Hall, and Wolfson College, exploring how to raise the profile of knowledge exchange (KE) and impact across all Cambridge Colleges.

Aimed particularly at Junior Research Fellows, Early Career Researchers, and Postgraduates, the session will offer insights and support for developing the impact side of your work. College-based staff who support researchers are also welcome.

The event will focus on the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, though all disciplines are invited to attend.

Find out more information and reserve your place here.

Join us for a Family Supper starting in the Meeting Room at 5.30pm where we do a craft activity, before heading for supper at about 6pm. After supper we will return to the Meeting Room to watch a film together if there is enough demand. 

There is no need to book – this is an informal event and dinner will be the regular dining hall with usual prices, and half price for children. Family suppers are organised by Chandy Nath and Susannah Salter.

Clare Hall launches its 2025/26 Intimate Engagements series with a performance of period instrument specialists Maggie FaultlessRachel Stroud, and Andrew Skidmore. Join them for a captivating journey through the history of music, exploring the evolution of instruments, the hidden meanings in musical notation, and the evidence that informs our understanding of historical performance practice.

The trio will perform repertoire spanning nearly 200 years – some familiar, others newly rediscovered – all brought to life with a fresh, playful perspective on musical history.

Tickets: £20 General Admission, £15 Clare Hall members, £5 students (available via Eventbrite).

The Clare Hall Choir will be performing in a joint Evensong with Corpus Christi College on Sunday 16 November. The service is 6pm and will be in Corpus Christi Chapel. The service will include music by Charles Villiers Stanford and Ola Gjeilo. All are welcome to attend.

Clare Hall is honoured to host an exhibition of paintings by Alan Caine (1936–2022), running from 10th October to 20th November 2025. Visitors are welcome daily between 10am and 5pm.

Learn more about the exhibition here.

A rotating display of some 400 pieces of studio ceramics. Learn more at https://www.clarehall.cam.ac.uk/bellcollection/

We are delighted to host regular Thursday lunchtime and Sunday afternoon yoga sessions in the Michaelmas term. Yoga is a holistic mind–body practice that combines physical postures, breathing techniques, and meditation to promote strength, flexibility, and inner balance.

A full list of dates and the sign up sheet can be found here.

Through mindfulness we cultivate attention to the here and now. We aim to witness our thoughts and feelings with detachment. We develop concentration, peace of mind and enjoyment of life with all its challenges.

As a group, we explore different means of developing mindfulness, including relaxation, guided meditation and attention to the breath or to a mantra. The sessions are led by Elizabeth Garnsey, and meet in the King Room on Main Site on Tuesdays 1-2pm. The door is open 1-2 but you are welcome to slip in and out whenever convenient for you. All members of the college and friends are welcome, including students, staff, fellows, researchers and visitors. Please contact ewg11@cam.ac.uk with any questions.

We are pleased to introduce new Taiji (Tai Chi) and QiGong sessions at Clare Hall for the Michaelmas term. The sessions will be taking place in the Richard Eden Suite on Wednesdays during lunchtime, starting on 1 October 2025.

A full list of dates and the sign up sheet can be found here.

We are delighted to host pilates classes at Clare Hall throughout Michaelmas. The classes will be held on Mondays during lunchtime. Pilates is a form of low-impact exercise that aims to strengthen muscles while improving postural alignment and flexibility.

A full list of dates and the sign up sheet can be found here.

Join the College’s Book Club as they discuss The House by the Dvina: A Russian Childhood by Eugenie Fraser. All College members are welcome to attend in-person, meeting in Clare Hall’s Meeting Room, or via Zoom. If you are not on the mailing list and would like to be, please send an email to gloria.carnevali@icloud.com, confirming your Clare Hall connection and putting the following as the email title: I would like to join the Book Club mailing list.

Learn more about the Book Club on this page.

A reminder that Clare Hall Choir practice takes place in Robinson College Chapel every Monday (in term-time, but not always restricted to the official Cambridge term dates) from 7.30-9pm. New members are always welcome, and no previous singing or musical experience is necessary. The only requirement is that you want to sing and have fun doing it! If you are interested in joining, please email Ben de Souza, the Choir’s Director, who is a Clare Hall Associate, freelance choral conductor and accordionist: bd402@cam.ac.uk.

Recent recordings of the choir can also be found on our YouTube channel.

Clare Hall Families is an informal group that holds events throughout the year, centred around our popular Family Suppers, which take place each term.

Join the Clare Hall Families mailing list and WhatsApp group by filling out the form.

For any enquiries, please contact Chandy Nath at chandy.nath@gmail.com.

Find a full range of events at https://www.clarehall.cam.ac.uk/events