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Wellcome
Collection Special Exhibitions Programme
2008
Skeletons, End of Life, Atoms, War
& Medicine And Sleeping & Dreaming
01 January 2008: An analysis of
26 skeletons selected from the Museum of
Londons collection of 17,000; textile
designs based on patterns found in x-ray
crystallography, not seen since the 1951
Festival of Britain; a newly commissioned
film by Marion Coutts and an exhibition
about the thoughts and wishes of the dying
- are some of the forthcoming special exhibitions
at Wellcome Collection during 2008. [full
listings below].
2008 will end with a major exhibition exploring
the complex relationship between War &
Medicine and the ways in which mankind's
desire to repair and heal has tried to keep
pace with its capacity to wound and kill.
The exhibition will look back as far as
the Crimean War and will be brought up to
date by specially commissioned artwork addressing
the problems of military medicine in the
conflict in Afghanistan. This will be the
second part of a two-phase collaboration
with the Deutsches Hygiene-Museum in Dresden,
the first of which, Sleeping & Dreaming,
opened on 28 November and closes on 9 March
2008.
Wellcome Collection (www.wellcomecollection.org)
the new £30m public venue from the
Wellcome Trust opened in June 2007. The
buildings three galleries combine
medicine, life and art to provide insight
into the human condition. Exhibitions, both
temporary and permanent, are supported through
a public events programme that brings together
experts from the arts, science and humanities
to further explore human wellbeing. Wellcome
Collection has been visited by over 100,000
people during its first five months of opening.
WELLCOME COLLECTION
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS 2008:
Full information on each temporary exhibition
will be posted at www.wellcomecollection.org
throughout 2008. Entry to all exhibitions
is free.
Sleeping & Dreaming (28 November
2007 10 March 2008)
Sleeping & Dreaming, the second major
temporary exhibition at Wellcome Collection,
explores sleep the mysterious state
we inhabit for a third of our lives. 250
objects across five major themes 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. 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
public events are detailed below.
Life Before Death (8 April - 18
May 2008)
The German photographer Walther Schels and
journalist Beate Lakotta spent a year talking
with terminally ill patients in hospices
across Germany. They photographed 24 consenting
patients shortly before and just after they
died. The resultant portraits are shown
side-by-side, accompanied by a short text
which describes the patient's experience
of the situation in which they find themselves
having to come to terms with the
imminent end to their lives.
Atoms to Patterns (24 April -
10 August 2008)
This exhibition brings to light an extraordinary
collection of vibrant textile designs from
the early 1950s, most of which have been
lying unseen in the collections of the Victoria
and Albert Museum and the Science Museum
for over 50 years. For the 1951 Festival
of Britain a group of designers collaborated
with some of the most distinguished scientists
of the period to devise a range of fabrics
and furnishings based on patterns revealed
by x-ray crystallography - a means of visualizing
the crystal structure of both organic and
inorganic materials.
Marion Coutts (30 May - 29 June
2008)
The artist Marion Coutts will present a
new film, commissioned by Wellcome Collection,
which will use objects from the collections
of Henry Wellcome and from the Science Museum
playfully to explore the workings of memory.
Skeletons (22 July - 28 September
2008)
The Museum of London has approximately 17,000
skeletons in its care, all removed for their
preservation, from building sites under
different parts of London. This exhibition
will present 26 of these skeletons along
with all the information about their health
and likely social circumstances that can
be gleaned from the location in which they
were found and from a detailed analysis
of their bones. The skeletons featured include
some dating back to Roman times and many
which reveal a great deal about the health
and social conditions of the period in which
they lived..
War & Medicine (November 2008
- March 2009)
The third major special exhibition at Wellcome
Collection and, following Sleeping &
Dreaming, the second of two exhibitions
devised in collaboration with the Deutsches
Hygiene-Museum, Dresden. War & Medicine
will assess the impact and influence that
warfare and medicine have had on one another.
It looks at the way mankind's desire to
repair and heal has tried to keep pace with
its capacity to maim and kill, meeting sometimes
with success and sometimes with failure.
As with Sleeping & Dreaming, this exhibition
will include the perspectives of artists,
writers and filmmakers as well as those
of medical scientists and social historians.
WELLCOME COLLECTION PERMANENT GALLERIES
Two of Wellcome Collections three
galleries are permanent. These are:
Medicine Man (350 m2):
This 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 Medicine Now exhibition explores contemporary
medical topics through the eyes of scientists,
artists and popular culture in a bright
contemporary environment.
SLEEPING & DREAMING PUBLIC EVENTS
All temporary exhibitions are supported
by a series of public events that enable
people to discover more about the subjects
they cover. Below are the remaining public
events for Sleeping & Dreaming that
bring together experts from science, the
arts and humanities to explore this twilight
world. Events are free unless otherwise
stated. All tickets must be booked in advance
from www.wellcomecollection.org/events
Late-night Film Festival Friday
25 January 2008, 19.0023.00
Explore Wellcome Collection by night and
see rare footage from the Wellcome Library
collection screened alongside classic feature
films and quirky shorts exploring sleeping
and dreaming. Galleries, café and
bookshop will be open throughout. A full
screening programme will be available in
December at www.wellcomecollection.org
Catherine Yass: Artist in Conversation and
premiere of new film work
Thursday 7 February 2008, 19.0020.30
The first opportunity of seeing a new work
by leading British artist Catherine Yass
that documents her waking moments and dream
recall. Catherine will be joined in conversation
by Lux Gallery Curator, Lucy Reynolds, and
will discuss her interests in sleeping and
dreaming.
Speaker: Catherine Yass, artist featured
in exhibition
Facilitator: Lucy Reynolds, Curator,
Lux
Sleep Talk
A unique symposium exploring insomnia and
sleeplessness
Friday 22 February 2008, 19.0021.00
Saturday 23 February 2008, 10.3017.00
Tickets: £30 / £20 concessions
This symposium will explore insomnia and
sleeplessness through science, psychology,
history, sociology and art. The event will
begin with a special performance of Bachs
Goldberg Variations by innovative classical
music group, Manning Cammerata. When Johann
Sebastian Bach first composed this music,
it was used as a curative for Count von
Kaiserlings insomnia.
Speakers Include
Ann Coxon, Assistant Curator, Tate Modern,
Kenton Kroker, Science and Technology Studies,
York University, Toronto
Eluned Sumners Bremner, Department of Womens
Studies, University of Auckland
Kevin Morgan, Director of Clinical Sleep
Research Unit, Loughborough University
Chris Idzikowski, Director, Edinburgh Sleep
Centre
Russell Foster, Professor of Circadian Neuroscience,
University of Oxford
An End To Feeling Shattered? If you could
live without sleep, would you?
Friday 28 February 2008, 19.0020.30
Drugs that enable you to stay awake 24 hours
a day have been produced but would you want
them? Should they be made available? What
would be the impact on your body, your relationships
and your life? Join a panel of outspoken
speakers to debate whether drugs are the
answer to 21st-centruy life.
Speakers
Simon Williams, Lecturer in Sociology, University
of Warwick
Danielle Turner, Neuroscience coordinator,
University of Cambridge
John Harris, Professor of Bioethics, University
of Manchester
Facilitator
Toby Murcott, Science writer and presenter
End
Press
Information
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
Mike Findlay
T +44 (0)20 7611 8612
E m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk
Katrina Nevin-Ridley
T +44 (0)20 7611 8540
E k.nevin-ridley@wellcome.ac.uk
Craig Brierley
T +44 (0)20 7611 7329
E c.brierley@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. 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 and the world
famous Wellcome Library.
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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