270 years of rewilding mind, soul and heart

Andy Haldane
CEO, RSA

This issue of the Journal celebrates the 270th anniversary of the RSA. On 22 March 1754, 11 good men and true — alas, they were all men — assembled in Rawthmell’s coffee house in Covent Garden.

When they emerged, the RSA had been born as the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (the ‘Royal’ prefix came in 1908). Over 270 years, it has become an institution whose social innovation and changemaking has shaped and reshaped the world not once, but many times.

As Anton Howes (the RSA’s Resident Historian) sets out in his article, the world today would be unrecognisable without the RSA. Gone would be millions of trees, trade fairs, school examinations, iconic institutions such as the Royal Academy, Natural History Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum, Science Museum, Royal Albert Hall and Royal College of Music, along with blue plaques (the history of which is told by Mike Thatcher), to name but a few.

rsajournal_issue1_2024 PDF, 7.88 MB

Contents

A world without the RSA

A split image with a historical-style illustration of a grand exhibition hall with a fountain and people on the left, and a blank white silhouette of the same shape on the right. The background is a gradient of teal to pink.

Soul conversations

A vinyl record with a cover showing a sepia-toned photo of a man singing into a microphone on stage, with "in house records" in the background. Below, three people are sitting and writing in notebooks.

Young at heart

Illustration of five children walking toward a large modern building. The children, dressed in casual summer clothes, are walking through a grassy area with a pigeon flying above them. The building features multiple stories and large windows.

King Cole’s blue-sky thinking

A grid of twelve blue historical plaques on a blue background, each commemorating a notable person, including Angela Carter, Mahatma Gandhi, Charlie Chaplin, and Edith Cavell, among others. Each plaque lists the person's name and their significance.

In conversation with Anab Jain

A woman sitting in a room with metallic foil insulation, holding a black helmet-like structure with metal brackets. She has long dark hair and is wearing a blue top. The background features plants and equipment.

50 Famous Fellows

The image features the number "50" in bold black text centered between two illustrated Corinthian columns. Below, smaller text reads "Famous Fellows" on a light pink background.

Power to the people

Person wearing headphones and a blue sports jersey sings into a microphone in a music studio. The room has posters on the wall, a computer with audio software open, and a window with blinds partially drawn.

Take courage

A person in white clothing and sneakers performs a dynamic leap on an empty urban street lined with old buildings. They are mid-air with arms and legs extended, showcasing grace and athleticism under a clear blue sky.

But the history of the RSA is much more than its list of innovations. The mind, soul and heart of the RSA are its Fellows. From a potentially much longer list, the article by Dan Matthews introduces 50 of our prominent changemakers. It is hard to imagine many institutions globally that have had so illustrious a set of Fellows (or members, as they were known before 1914). From US presidents to scientific pioneers, from philosophical trailblazers to global peacemakers, from environmental rainmakers to cultural icons.

… at the core of the RSA's work over the centuries has been acting with foresight, operating one step ahead, leading system change from the front.

While rightly celebrating our illustrious past, at the core of the RSA’s work over the centuries has been acting with foresight, operating one step ahead, leading system change from the front. Such are the divides across society, doing so may never have been more difficult. That makes the work of people like AY Young, musician, entrepreneur, environmental changemaker — and RSA Fellow — who is profiled in this edition, all the more important.

The ‘In conversation’ interview, with Anab Jain, puts these changemaking efforts in broader perspective. Her work at design studio Superflux is about using the power of active and immersive experiences to reimagine, and ultimately improve, our collective futures — in her words, to “make the future less of a foreign land”. And I love the way Anab describes the role the RSA can play in this collective reimagining, what she calls the “rewilding of the mind, soul and heart”.

What our Fellows are reading

We Must Not Think of Ourselves by Lauren Grodstein

Once I started this book, I couldn’t put it down. Set in Warsaw in 1940, the story focuses on the life of Adam Paskow, a Jewish teacher imprisoned in the Warsaw ghetto under the Nazi regime…

Cover of "We Must Not Think of Ourselves" by Lauren Grodstein. It features an urban street scene at sunset, with silhouettes of people walking. The sky is in shades of orange and purple, and buildings line the street, with towers visible in the background.

Not the End of the World by Hannah Ritchie

This book offers a totally different take on global sustainability. Not a blinkered, micro-view of planetary doom, but a considered, wise, macro-approach…

Book cover with concentric circles in green, yellow, pink, and orange on a white background. Text reads: "Not the End of the World" by Hannah Ritchie, with quotes from Margaret Atwood and others against a light yellow background.

The Alternative by Nick Romeo

This book sets out to answer the age-old question, ‘Does money bring happiness?’, beginning with a summary of a short story by Leo Tolstoy (“How Much Land Does a Man Need?”) in which the protagonist learns that the pursuit of excess leads to… nothing…

Cover of the book "The Alternative: How to Build a Just Economy" by Nick Romeo. It features blue icons of a house, tree, road, and globe balancing on a white background, with a yellow border.

Had the RSA not existed, the world today would, without question, be a poorer place in mind, soul and heart. Indeed, given the problems facing the world today — economically, societally, environmentally — we would almost certainly be convening in a Covent Garden coffee house (with a more diverse team of 11) to create something RSA-like were it not to exist. The RSA is of the past. But it is also very much for the future. Happy anniversary to us, and here’s to the next 270 years.

Andy Haldane is Chief Executive Officer at the RSA.

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