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Fat Man Acquired
for Wellcome Collection
Wellcome
Trust Announces Three Major Contemporary
Art Purchases For New Public Venue
6 June 2006, London: Three new art
works by leading contemporary artists including
a mountainous figure of obesity, a sculpture
made from HIV drugs and a symbolic representation
of the Periodic Table have been purchased
by Wellcome Trust for Wellcome Collection,
a £30m new public venue that explores
medicine, art and life which opens in June
2007.
The works by Marc Quinn, Keith Wilson
and John Isaacs all engage in different
ways with medical science and captivate
the viewer into considering issues of human
wellbeing and survival. The works are:
- John Isaacs - I Cant
Help the Way I Feel, 2003
- Marc Quinn - Silvia Petretti
- Sustiva Tenofivir, 3TC (HIV), 2005
- Keith Wilson - Periodic Table,
2004
[Images of all three works can be downloaded
from the contemporary section of the Picture
Library. Click
here to access.]
Wellcome Collection (www.wellcomecollection.org)
will use contemporary and experimental techniques
to challenge and inspire visitors to consider
issues of human health and survival through
the ages. It is the first venue of its kind
in the UK and forms a significant cultural
landmark for London and the country. Wellcome
Collection is targeted at all those over
14 years and entry will be free.
Contemporary art will be an integral part
of Wellcome Collection. The new acquisitions
will be displayed alongside existing works
in the Wellcome Trusts collection
including established artists Michael
Landy, Christine Borland, Spencer Tunick
and Mauro Peruchetti as well as emerging
artists such as Luke Jerram, Daryl Waller,
Alistair Mackie and Julie Cockburn.
The six-storey building at 183 Euston Road
will house:
- Two permanent exhibitions: Medicine
Man, showcasing a mix of 900 fascinating
objects from Sir Henrys original
collection and Medicine Now, a look at
contemporary medical topics through the
eyes of scientists, artists and popular
culture, illustrating developments in
aspects of these topics in the era after
Sir Henrys death.
- Temporary exhibitions: the largest gallery
will host temporary exhibitions and shows,
presenting newly commissioned works and
thematic exhibitions built around topics
of medical, cultural and ethical significance.
The first temporary exhibition will be
announced in 2007.
Sir Henry Wellcome (1853 1936),
Wellcome Trust founder, was a pharmacist,
entrepreneur, philanthropist and collector.
His passionate interest in medicine and
its history, as well as ethnography and
anthropology, led him to gather more than
one million objects from across the world.
Amongst the art he acquired is the only
known etching by Van Gogh of his
psychiatrist, Renaissance anatomical drawings
and a painting by the Dutch 16th century
artist Adam Elsheimer of an itinerant
drug seller.
Wellcome Trust continues to collect and
commission art from a huge range of contemporary
artists, not just visual artists, whose
work brings new perspectives to issues surrounding
medical science. A recording of a poem by
Michael Symonds Roberts about the Human
Genome entitled To John Donne will
be shown alongside a display about the Human
Genome within the permanent collection Medicine
Now.
Dr. Ken Arnold, Head of Public Programmes,
Wellcome Trust, said: Sir Henry
Wellcomes own collection is incredibly
eclectic, eccentric and broad-ranging. Wellcome
Collection gives us the opportunity to continue
this broad-minded approach so that we can
acquire works and commission artists who
are united by the insights they give to
biomedical science, but fantastically disparate
in their approaches to it.
The new works detailed:
- John Isaacs I Cant
Help the Way I Feel, 2003 is a body
of fat that seemingly envelopes its own
head which stands at over 2m high. Both
huge and gruesomely real, this piece depicts
the figure, unable to be a complete body,
as both monstrous and pathetic. With public
debate over childhood obesity raging and
the dietary health of the nation under
close scrutiny, John Isaacs work
has a shocking potency and timely resonance.
- Marc Quinns Silvia Petretti
- Sustiva Tenofivir, 3TC (HIV), 2005
is one of a series of sculptures called
'Chemical Life Support. Quinn has
cast the body of Silvia Petretti who is
HIV positive, using the drugs that she
depends on to support her life - Sustava
Tenofivir, 3TC and wax. The resulting
figure is a perfect sculpted form reminiscent
of Renaissance visions of marble perfection,
creating a powerful tension between the
relative fragility of the body and its
perpetual impending mortality and a physical
presence that is hard to ignore.
- Keith Wilsons Periodic
Table, 2004 is large-scale installation,
comprising 92 modular cubes, echoing the
scientific classification of naturally
occurring elements. Periodic Table sets
up connections between an extensive range
of collected objects, from redundant machinery
to logs and empty beer cases, each placed
in an individual compartment. In some
cases there is a clear link between the
object and its position in the table.
However, it is predominantly a work of
allusion and the power of suggestion,
implying relationships between assorted
materials where none in fact exist, thus
subverting the scientific structure of
matter and order of everyday life.
END
[Images of all three works can be downloaded
from the contemporary section of the Picture
Library. Click
here to access.]
Notes To Editors
Wellcome Collection (www.wellcomecollection.org.uk)
Sir Henry Wellcome (1853 - 1936), founder
of the Wellcome Trust, was a pharmacist,
entrepreneur, philanthropist and collector.
His passionate interest in medicine and
its history, as well as ethnography and
anthropology, led him to gather more than
a million objects from across the globe.
In 1932 the Wellcome Building at 183 Euston
Road was built to his specification and
housed the majority of his collections.
Wellcome Collection is a £30m transformation
of this building into a major new visitor
destination, the first of its kind in the
UK. Wellcome Collection, opening summer
2007, explores the connections between medicine,
life and art using a contemporary and experimental
approach. Audiences from all backgrounds
and interests will be inspired to consider
afresh issues of wellbeing and human identity.
Wellcome Collection will comprise three
galleries of permanent and temporary exhibitions
totaling 1350m2, a flexible events space,
the Wellcome Library, conference facilities,
a café, bookshop and members
club. The building will also house the Wellcome
Trust Centre for the History of Medicine
(part of University College London).
There will be two permanent exhibitions:
Medicine Man, originally held
at the British Museum, will showcase a mix
of 900 fascinating objects from Sir Henrys
original collection. Medicine Now
will look at contemporary medical topics
through the eyes of scientists, artists
and popular culture, illustrating developments
in aspects of these topics in the era after
Sir Henrys death. The largest gallery
(650m2) will host temporary exhibitions
and shows, presenting newly commissioned
works and thematic exhibitions built around
topics of medical, cultural and ethical
significance.
A lively programme of public events will
expand on exhibition themes, bringing together
experts from the worlds of arts, science
and medicine to explore the current issues
and ancient mysteries of human wellbeing
183 Euston Road is the site of the Wellcome
Trusts former headquarters. Hopkins
Architects is managing the buildings
transformation.
Pricing and target age range
Wellcome Collection is free to enter. Most
events will be free, although Wellcome Collection
reserves the right to charge. Wellcome Collection
is principally aimed at adults and young
people over 14 years old. Resources for
children will be available.
Wellcome Library (http://library.wellcome.ac.uk)
The Wellcome Library is one of the worlds
major resources for the study of medical
history. Over 600,000 books and journals,
an extensive range of manuscripts, archives,
films, and more than 100,000 pictures are
available for study. The Wellcome Library
will be housed in Wellcome Collection. It
is currently in a temporary location at
210 Euston Road London, NW1 2BE.
Past exhibitions (www.wellcome.ac.uk/pastexhibitions)
During the past decade the Wellcome Trust
has organised more than 20 exhibitions covering
a vast range of biomedical topics, from
jellyfish to autism, metamorphosis to pain.
In 2003, Medicine Man at
the British Museum (a showcase of roughly
700 objects from Henry Wellcomes original
collection of more than one million) attracted
approximately 200,000 visits. Between 2002
and 2005 the Trust presented a series of
five major exhibitions at the Science Museum,
culminating with Future Face
in late 2004 which attracted 120,000 visits.
The Trust also hosted numerous exhibitions
in its TwoTen Gallery and funded major projects
such as the Wellcome Trust Gallery (home
to the Living and Dying exhibition)
at the British Museum.
Wellcome Trust (www.wellcome.ac.uk)
The Wellcome Trust, an independent charity,
is one of the world's leading biomedical
research charities and is the UK's largest
non-governmental source of funds for biomedical
research. The Wellcome Trust has an asset
base of over £11bn, spends over £400
million a year and funds 3,500 researchers
in 44 countries. The Wellcome Trusts
mission is to foster and promote research
with the aim of improving human and animal
health. Wellcome Trust funding has supported
a number of major successes including:
- Sequencing of the human genome
- Development of the antimalarial drug
artemisinin
- Pioneering cognitive behavioural therapies
for psychological disorders
- Establishing the UK Biobank
- Building the Wellcome Wing at the Science
Museum.
The Wellcome Trusts registered charity
number is 210183.
Contacts And Further Information
Wellcome Collection Website: www.wellcomecollection.org.uk.
The website for Wellcome Collection.
Online Press Centre: www.kallaway.co.uk/wellcome.htm
High-resolution images of ancient and
contemporary Wellcome Collection exhibits
can be downloaded from this site. All Wellcome
Collection press releases and backgrounders
are also available.
Kallaway: www.kallaway.co.uk
Public Relations, Wellcome Collection
Will Kallaway 020 7221 7883
will.kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
Anna Cusden 020 7221 7883 anna.cusden@kallaway.co.uk
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