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Heartfelt
Emotions
A Major Two Day Public Symposium On Emotions
& The Battle
Between The Head & The Heart
Neil Pearson Reads Modern Love
Can You Die Of A Broken Heart?
Ard Kumbh Mela, The Largest Crowd
On Earth
Emotional Intelligence
1 August 2007: What are emotions? Can
you die of a broken heart? Do we control
our emotions, or do they control us? What
makes us feel love and hate, anger or joy?
These questions and more will be answered
at Heartfelt Emotions, a special
two day symposium run by Wellcome Collection
that brings together experts from the worlds
of science, history, art and philosophy
to explore the role of our heads and hearts
in shaping our moods and behaviour.
Wellcome Collection - www.wellcomecollection.org
- opened on 21 June, 2007. During its first
month of opening over 25,000 people visited
and almost 1,000 took part in public events
and tours.
Heartfelt Emotions:
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Dates: Friday 7
September, 1900 - 2100hrs. Saturday
8 September, 1000 - 1630hrs |
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Location: Wellcome
Collection, 183 Euston Road, London,
NW1 2BE |
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Booking: Tickets
cost £25 or £20 concessions.
The price includes entry to event on
both days and refreshments throughout
(including lunch on Saturday)
Booking line: 020 7611 2222. Details
at www.wellcomecollection.org/heartfelt |
Science is only now beginning to unravel
the huge role emotions play in our lives.
For example, death rates are up to 50 per
cent higher in the six months after loss
of a spouse, with the effect greater in
men than in women. A second example shows
that large crowds can be peaceful and serene
rather than stressful as popularly assumed,
as illustrated in a study of 'the largest
crowd on earth' at the Ard Kumbh Mela Hindu
festival in India, by the University of
St Andrews. Heartfelt Emotions will explore
this powerful field of human wellbeing,
set against the increasing interest in emotion.
| Highlights
include: |
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Neil Pearson reads
Modern Love by George Meredith.
A dramatic performance of one of the
world's most poignant and emotional
poems. |
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Don't go breaking my
heart? Martin Cowie, Imperial College.
Sweaty palms and a racing pulse can
be symptomatic of fear or love. How
do emotions have such a powerful role
on the body and behaviour? |
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Why Spock could not
evolve. Dylan Evans, author of The Science
of Sentiment. Western thinkers dismissed
emotions as luxuries and barriers to
progress. Modern thinking is debunking
these views, with emerging consensus
that emotion is vital to our evolution
and intelligent action. |
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An emotional history
of the heart. Fay Bound Alberti, Univeristy
of Lancaster. Only recently has
the heart been relegated from emotional
core and centre of being to a simple
pump, yet it still remains a hugely
powerful symbol and organ that we associate
with our emotions. Find out how this
intimate relationship has evolved |
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Collective Emotion
- lessons from the largest crowd on
earth. Clare Cassidy, University of
St Andrews. The Ard Kumbh Mela is
the largest gathering of people on the
planet and large crowds are often associated
with violence and angry emotion. Yet
what can this peaceful gathering teach
us? |
A full programme of the symposium can be
viewed at: www.wellcomecollection.org/heartfelt
Heartfelt Emotions is part of a comprehensive
programme of public events at Wellcome Collection.
Events range from open heart surgery through
to discussions about treating teenagers
with mental health problems and performances
of the Hindu epic 'Ramayana'. Full details
for all events can be found at www.wellcomecollection.org/events
Lisa Jamieson, Events Manager, Wellcome
Collection, said: "Heartfelt
Emotions is an amazing opportunity to pause
and consider our emotional intelligence.
We're all familiar with the old adage of
head ruling the heart, but how much truth
is there in this? By assembling some of
the UK's leading experts in the field, we
aim to provide our audience with the opportunity
to explore the pivotal questions in depth
and debate their views over an exciting
day and a half."
Heartfelt Emotions takes place at Wellcome
Collection (www.wellcomecollection.org)
the new £30m public building from
the Wellcome Trust. The event is linked
to the Wellcome Collection's Heart Exhibition,
running until 16 September 2007. The Heart
exhibition brings together contemporary
and historic artefacts from across the world
to form an exhibition that traces the history
of our medical understanding of the heart
and examines its extraordinary medical,
symbolic and cultural significance. The
exhibition features exhibits as diverse
as work by Leonardo da Vinci and
Andy Warhol, through to the Egyptian
Book of the Dead and live heart surgery.
Wellcome Collection combines three galleries
together with the world-famous Wellcome
Library, a public events programme, café,
bookshop, conference centre and members'
club to provide visitors with radical insights
into the human condition.
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Notes to Editors
Press information
Wellcome Collection Media Centre:
www.kallaway.co.uk/wellcome.htm
Press contacts:
Will Kallaway
T +44 (0)20 7221 7883
E will.kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
Anna Cusden
T +44 (0)20 7221 7883
E anna.cusden@kallaway.co.uk
Further information on Wellcome Collection
and The Wellcome Trust is below.
Wellcome Collection: www.wellcomecollection.org
Wellcome Collection is a new £30 million
visitor attraction from the Wellcome Trust
that opened on 21 June 2007. Admission is
free.
Wellcome Collection was opened on 21 June,
2007. During its first month of opening
over 25,000 people visited and almost 1,000
took part in public events and tours.
Wellcome Collection is a world first. It
combines three contemporary galleries together
with the world-famous Wellcome Library,
public events forum, café, bookshop,
conference centre and members' club, to
provide visitors with radical insight into
the human condition.
Wellcome Collection builds on the vision,
legacy and personal collection of Wellcome
Trust founder Sir Henry Wellcome and is
part of the Wellcome Trust's mission to
foster understanding and promote research
to improve human and animal health. The
building is centred around three substantial
galleries totalling 1350m2:
| Highlights
include: |
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Special exhibitions
(650m2): The largest gallery in Wellcome
Collection is used to host temporary
exhibitions, presenting newly commissioned
works and thematic shows structured
around topics of medical, cultural and
ethical significance. The opening exhibition
is The Heart, 21 June - 16 September
2007. |
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Medicine Man (350m2):
The permanent exhibition contains more
than 500 strange and beautiful artefacts
from Sir Henry Wellcome's original collection,
presented in a rich American walnut-paneled
gallery, centered on a large 'Wunderkammer'
cabinet. |
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Medicine Now (350
m2): The permanent Medicine Now exhibition
explores contemporary medical topics
through the eyes of scientists, artists
and popular culture in a bright contemporary
environment. |
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Public events:
A lively programme of public events
expand on exhibition themes. Wellcome
Collection's flexible events space,
the Forum, will bring audiences face-to-face
with prominent experts and personalities
from the worlds of art, science and
the humanities, to explore current issues
and ancient mysteries of human wellbeing.
Heartfelt Emotions is the first of ten
events in September and October 2007. |
Wellcome Library
The Wellcome Library contains over two million
items and is one of the world's greatest
collections for the study of the history
and progress of medicine. The public areas
of the Library span two floors of Wellcome
Collection and include the fully restored
Reading Room, first used as a Hall of Statuary
by Sir Henry Wellcome in 1932.
The Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust is the largest charity
in the UK and the second largest medical
research charity in the world. It funds
innovative biomedical research, in the UK
and internationally, spending around £500
million each year to support the brightest
scientists with the best ideas. The Wellcome
Trust supports public debate about biomedical
research and its impact on health and wellbeing.
Wellcome Trust funding has supported a number
of major successes, including:
sequencing
the human genome
establishing
the UK Biobank
development
of the antimalarial drug artemisinin
pioneering
cognitive behavioural therapies for psychological
disorders
building
the Wellcome Wing at the Science Museum
the
Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium,
the largest ever genetic study of common
diseases such as diabetes, coronary heart
disease and bipolar disorder
The Wellcome Trust is a charity registered
in England, no. 210183.
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