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Sleeping
And Dreaming: Our Most Mysterious State
Explored At A New Exhibition In
Wellcome Collection
Sigmund Freud
brain scans...David
Baddiel
16th-century alarm clocks...
Catherine Yass
Aristotle
Jane
Gifford...Laura Ford
lullabies...
Paul McCartney
interrogation...Goya
insomnia
30 October 2007: Sleeping
& Dreaming, a groundbreaking exhibition
that explores sleep - the mysterious state
we all inhabit for a third of our lives
- will be the second major temporary exhibition
at Wellcome Collection. A full programme
of public events, including David Baddiel
discussing insomnia, an exclusive preview
of a new film work by Catherine Yass and
an investigation into dreaming, will support
the exhibition (event details below).
| Sleeping & Dreaming: |
29 November 2007-10 March
2008. Entry is free. |
|
| Press
preview: |
28 November 2007, 09.00-13.00.
From 09.00 breakfast will be served
in the Peyton & Byrne café.
At 09.45 Dr Ken Arnold, Head of Public
Programmes, James Peto, Senior Curator,
Temporary Exhibitions, Kate Forde, Exhibitions
Curator will give a press conference
followed by a tour. |
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| Location: |
Wellcome Collection, 183
Euston Road, London, NW1 2BE. |
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| Public information:
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www.wellcomecollection.org
and +44 (0)20 7611 2222. |
Wellcome Collection opened
on 21 June 2007. To date 75 000 people have
visited its three galleries and almost 1000
have taken part in public events and tours.
Sleeping & Dreaming draws together
250 objects across five major themes (detailed
below) to enable visitors to explore the
biomedical and neurological processes that
take place in the sleeping body and the
social and cultural areas of our lives to
which sleep and dreams are
linked. The exhibition is the first of a
two-part collaboration with the Deutsches
Hygiene-Museum in Dresden.
Presented in a dark and dramatically lit
space designed by the German architect Nikolaus
Hirsch, exhibits range from artworks
by Goya, Catherine Yass, Jane Gifford
and Laura Ford to an interview with
a victim of sleep-deprivation interrogation;
from a vehicle designed to provide homeless
people with a mobile place to sleep to an
extraordinary range of alarm clocks, and
a collection of traditional lullabies from
around the world.
Sleeping & Dreaming is presented across
five major themes:
Dead Tired: Is a life without sleep
conceivable? Dead Tired features Peter
Tripp, an American DJ who, in 1959,
broke the world record by going without
sleep for eight days. Tripp, who was broadcasting
during the attempt, is said to have become
increasingly incoherent and to have begun
hallucinating towards the end of the experiment.
His record was broken by fellow American
Randy Gardner, who stayed awake for
11 days in 1964, and whose experiences are
also featured in the exhibition. Dead Tired
explores the issues of sleep deprivation
and features a victim of Stasi sleep-deprivation
interrogation talking about his experiences.
Visitors will also be able to test their
own tiredness via an online survey. (This
is available to be trialed in advance -
please contact Kallaway.)
World Without Sleep: Artificial lighting
has radically changed our sleeping habits
and work patterns. Daylight and the changing
seasons have given way to alarm clocks and
stimulants to keep us awake. The exhibition
explores sleep experiments held in caves
and bunkers during the 1930s through to
sleep in the modern world, highlighted by
the Japanese practice of inemuri:
sleeping in situ regardless of the
occasion, from business meetings to parliament.
Laura Ford's child-sized figures wearing
donkeys' heads recall the fantastical slumbers
of A Midsummer Night's Dream while
an interactive exhibit gives advice on jet
lag and how to avoid it, and Paul Ramirez
Jonas's Another Day counts down
the time to sunrise in 90 international
cities. A collection of bizarre, sometimes
'Heath Robinson' alarm clocks illustrates
the ways in which people have woken through
the ages. Examples include a clock that
lights a candle and a device that transforms
a gentleman's pocket watch into an alarm
clock.
Elusive Sleep: Having a bedroom,
a dedicated place for sleeping, is a relatively
new phenomenon, only becoming standard in
the West in the mid-20th century. But a
bedroom does not guarantee sleep, and how
do those without a regular place to sleep
rest and dream? Elusive Sleep features Krzysztof
Wodiczko's Homeless Vehicle, a nomadic
sleeping unit for homeless people that not
only provides mobility, privacy and rest,
but also functions as a political comment
on social neglect. Nocturnal disturbances
are also explored. A series of 1930s public
health posters warn about the dangers of
fleas and bed bugs alongside
magnified examples of these insects. Insomnia
and the increasing use of sleeping pills
are also explored.
Dream Worlds: Dreaming challenges
our rational model of the world. The laws
of space and time are annulled and anything
is possible. Sleeping & Dreaming
examines how our dreaming and waking states
intermingle: artists often attribute their
creative ideas to nocturnal inspiration.
Exhibits include Paul McCartney describing
how the tune to the Beatles' Yesterday
came to him in a dream, while musician Giuseppe
Tartini and scientist Friedrich August
Kekule von Stradonitz attribute great
discoveries to dreams. Kekule, credited
as the principal founder of the theory of
chemical structure, said that the structure
of carbon bonds in benzene came to him in
a dream as a snake biting its tale. The
understanding of benzene, and with it all
aromatic compounds, provided a huge leap
forward for chemistry. Also examined in
the exhibition is Sigmund Freud's
The Interpretation of Dreams. This
publication, widely considered to be Freud's
most important contribution to psychology,
placed dream analysis at the heart of a
new and radical approach to understanding
the unconscious.
Traces of Sleep: In mythology and popular
culture, sleep is often associated with
other states of unconsciousness and with
death. The exhibition explores these themes
through exhibits ranging from Aristotle's
treatise 'On Sleep and Sleeplessness', in
which he argues that sleep is caused by
a cooling process taking place in the heart,
through to Hans Berger's revolutionary
electroencephalogram (EEG) machine. Berger's
machine, developed in the 1920s, showed
for the first time that the brain never
ceases to be active, even while we are asleep.
His discovery debunked earlier science and
set the scene for a new genre of sleep studies.
Other exhibits include a copy of an 1827
machine designed to tune the nerves to prevent
sleepwalking.
Collaboration with the Deutsches Hygiene-Museum,
Dresden
Wellcome Collection and the Deutsches Hygiene-Museum
have developed a unique partnership with
the aim of creating major exhibitions to
be shown at both institutions. Drawing partly
upon their own exceptional collections,
these exhibitions will seek to engage the
public with some of the most important issues
relating to human health and wellbeing.
The Deutsches Hygiene-Museum and Wellcome
Collection have developed two exhibitions
in collaboration: Sleeping & Dreaming
and War and Medicine, details of which
are yet to be announced. Sleeping &
Dreaming was exhibited at the Deutsches
Hygiene-Museum from 30 March to 3 October
2007, before coming to Wellcome Collection.
War and Medicine will be on show
at Wellcome Collection from October 2008
to February 2009 before moving to Dresden.
Dr Ken Arnold, Head of Public Programmes,
Wellcome Collection, said: "Building
on the huge success and public interest
of The Heart, our first thematic show, this
new exhibition applies the unique Wellcome
Collection approach of freely mixing art,
science and other disciplines to subjects
of universal interest: sleeping and dreaming.
"Sleeping & Dreaming is the first
of two major collaborations with the Deutsches
Hygiene-Museum in Dresden. It has already
received spectacular reviews and huge visitor
numbers during its showing there."
James Peto, Senior Curator, Temporary Exhibitions,
Wellcome Collection, said: "Using
documents and films from the world of science,
together with cultural items including historical
artefacts and the work of contemporary artists,
this exhibition vividly demonstrates how
the phenomena of sleeping and dreaming have
inspired people's imagination through the
ages.
"The partnership with the Hygiene-Museum
in Dresden enables the public to see items
from its outstanding collection alongside
objects from the Wellcome Trust and other
international institutions."
Sleeping & Dreaming public events
Sleeping & Dreaming public events
enable visitors to explore the scientific
and cultural aspects of sleep and dreams
with medical and arts experts. A full list
of events will be released prior to the
exhibition opening. The list below details
those already confirmed.
Public booking information
Tickets: All events are free, unless
otherwise stated.
Booking: Phone 020 7611 2222, email
events@wellcomecollection.org or book online
at www.wellcomecollection.org/events
The Mysteries of Dreaming
6 December 2007, 19.00-20.30
Dreams were once considered to hold major
personal and religious importance. Some
cultures still consider this the case. 'The
Mysteries of Dreaming' explores the personal,
cultural and scientific aspects of dreaming
and its function in wellbeing. Speakers:
Mark Blagrove, Senior Lecturer in Psychology,
Swansea University; Iain Edgar, Senior Lecturer
in Anthropology, Durham University; Daniel
Pick, Professor of Cultural and Intellectual
History, Birkbeck, University of London.
Late-night Film Festival
25 January 2008, 19.00-23.00
A late-night film festival with the focus
on sleeping and dreaming, as well as films
from the Wellcome Library's moving image
collection. Films will be show in the Forum
and auditorium. A confirmed programme will
be available shortly.
Catherine Yass in Conversation
7 February 2008, 19.00-20.30
Artist Catherine Yass talks about her ideas
on dreaming and her work on the subject.
Central to the talk will be a premiere of
a film she has made that captures her recounting
her dreams the moment she wakes.
Sleep Talk
22 February 2008, 19.00-21.00
23 February 2008, 10.30-17.00
A day-and-a-half symposium to explore insomnia
through science, psychology, history, sociology,
literature and art, held in partnership
with the Wellcome Centre for the History
of Medicine at University College London.
Speakers include: David Baddiel, writer
and comedian; Kenton Kroker, Assistant Professor
of Science and Technology Studies, York
University, Toronto; Professor Eluned Sumner
Bremner, Department of Women's Studies,
University of Auckland, New Zealand; Kevin
Morgan, Director, Insomnia Research Programme,
Loughborough Sleep Research Centre, Loughborough
University; Chris Idzikowski, Director,
Edinburgh Sleep Centre; Professor Russell
Foster, Wellcome Trust Centre for Human
Genetics, University of Oxford.
Further details to be announced for 'Sleep
Talk'; the programme is subject to change.
An End to Feeling Shattered?
28 February 2008, 19.00-20.30
Are we searching for the day when we never
have to sleep? The emergence of narcolepsy
prescription drugs on the black market has
show there is public demand for healthy
people to try to medicate and control the
hours they sleep. Big questions are faced
by society, drug companies and medical science
- should the option to limit sleep be available?
Speakers: Dr Simon Williams, Lecturer in
Sociology, University of Warwick; Danielle
Turner, Neuroscience Coordinator, University
of Cambridge; John Harris, Professor of
Bioethics, University of Manchester.
End
Wellcome
Collection press contacts
Wellcome Collection media centre and
images:
www.kallaway.co.uk/wellcome.htm
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
Wellcome Trust
Media Centre: www.wellcome.ac.uk/aboutus/mediaoffice
Katrina Nevin-Ridley
T +44 (0)20 7611 8540/ 07973 481485
E k.nevin-ridley@wellcome.ac.uk
Craig Brierley
T +44 (0)20 7611 7329
E c.brierley@wellcome.ac.uk
Mike Findlay
T +44 (0)20 7611 8612
E m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk
About 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 is a world first. It
combines three contemporary galleries together
with the world-famous Wellcome Library,
a public events forum, a café, a
bookshop, a conference centre and a club,
to provide visitors with radical insights
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 and promote research
with the aim of improving human and animal
health. The building is centred on three
substantial galleries totalling 1350 m2:
Special exhibitions (650 m2): 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
was The Heart (21 June-16 September 2007).
Medicine Man (350 m2): This permanent
exhibition contains more than 500 strange
and beautiful artefacts from Sir Henry Wellcome's
original collection, presented in a rich
American walnut-panelled gallery, centred
on a large 'Wunderkammer' cabinet.
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.
Public events: A lively programme
of public events expands 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.
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.
About 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 over £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
UK Biobank
development
of the antimalarial drug artemisinin
pioneering
cognitive behavioural therapies for psychological
disorders
building
the Wellcome Wing at the Science Museum
setting
up 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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