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By Popular Demand
Wellbeing In The 21st Century: An
Enquiry Into The Nations's Health
30 October, 2006, London: The Wellbeing
Series - three FREE public events organised
by the Wellcome Trust - is being rerun following
sell-out success in July 2006. The Wellbeing
Series explores the nation's health through
events that ask: What makes us happy? Why
does music move us? How healthy can we be?
Experts from the arts, sciences and humanities
will discuss and debate with the audience
how contemporary notions of wellbeing affect
how we think, feel and function. An informal
drinks reception will form part of the evening.
The Wellbeing Series is a foretaste of events
to be held at Wellcome Collection (www.wellcomecollection.org),
a major new public venue from the Wellcome
Trust opening in summer 2007. Wellcome Collection
will explore the relationships between medicine,
life and art in a contemporary and experimental
way, enabling visitors to think afresh about
wellbeing and human identity.
The three free events are held at the Soho
Theatre, Dean Street, London.
1. What makes us happy? 28 November, 1900
- 2100 (BSL interpreted)
2. Full life, long life? 5 December, 1900
- 2100
3. Exploring the rhythms of life, 11 December,
1900 - 2100
Booking
Information
Tickets must be booked in advance and
are not available on the door.
Booking hotline: 020 7611 8442.
Booking email: events@wellcome.ac.uk
Listen Again
Exerts from the previous Wellbeing Series
can be downloaded from the Wellcome Collection
website. (www.wellcomecollection.org).
What Makes Us
Happy?
Tuesday 28 November, Soho Theatre, Dean
Street, London: 1900 - 2100
What is happiness and why is everyone talking
about it? We are healthier and wealthier
than ever before, and the rising trend isn't
over. We have choices and opportunities,
access to education and healthcare that
previous generations fought to achieve.
Yet crime, depression and alcoholism are
on the rise: are we happy now?
What Makes Us Happy? Will seek to address
whether happiness changes with age, circumstance
and culture and what the future might hold
for our wellbeing.
Speakers:
- Rita Carter, author of Mapping
the Mind, explains what is happening in
our heads as our emotions take charge
and explores a future where new pharmacological
innovations will allow us to directly
manipulate the brain to induce feelings
of wellbeing.
- Richard Schoch, Professor of
the History of Culture at Queen Mary College,
University of London, challenges Western
models of happiness as they are currently
evolving. He traces the philosophical
routes to wellbeing in both East and West
and explores the role of history in our
future.
- Felicia A Huppert, Professor
of Psychology at University of Cambridge
and co-editor of The Science of Well-Being.
Her belief is that a shift of emphasis
in psychology to researching positive
rather than negative human characteristics
will yield unprecedented insights into
human behaviour, with profound implications
for a better society.
- Chaired by Gabrielle Walker,
science writer and presenter
This is a BSL interpreted event
Full Life, Long
Life?
Tuesday, 5 December, Soho Theatre, Dean
Street, London: 1900 - 2100
What part does medicine play in the future
of the nation's health? Can genetics cure
heart failure and biology guard against
ageing? As new aspirations to lifestyle
and longevity push medical demands, are
we witnessing changing patterns in the relationship
between medicine and culture that promise
new visions of public health?
Speakers:
- Tom Kirkwood, Director, Institute
for Ageing and Health, University of Newcastle.
Faced with an unprecedented population
boom in the over 60s and upwards trends
in life expectancy in the UK, Tom Kirkwood
will focus on the key challenges facing
the relatively new field of biogerontology.
How do we understand the ageing process
itself, and can we cure it? Do the exciting
new leads in medical science promise a
longer lived and more independent old
age?
- Michael Fitzpatrick, an East
London GP for the last 20 years, is a
sceptic about modern drives to longevity.
He asks: does our quest for longevity
lead to the subordination of life well
lived? Is it worth living more austere,
tedious and fearful lives in the here
and now for the sake of two more years
at the end? Need we surrender quality
for quantity? For him, the key question
is not how much longer we can live, but
how human society can advance if we do
live longer and healthier lives.
- Anders Sandberg, Research Associate,
Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford
University, explores the increasing pressure
for what he calls 'transmedicine': the
pressure to achieve better memories, sharper
attention, longer lives and brain-computer
links. In this scenario, medicine is becoming
a facet of lifestyle, challenging the
traditional notion of what medicine is
for. But will medicine disappoint our
aspirations?.
- Chaired by Gabrielle Walker,
science writer and presenter
Exploring the
Rhythms of Life
Monday, 11 December, Soho Theatre, Dean
Street, London: 1900 - 2100 Music
has and always will play a key part in self
expression, but only now are scientists
beginning to understand the part it also
plays in our development. Its power to affect
us is well known - it can hurt and heal,
motivate and move, inspire and empower us.
But we are only beginning to understand
how, when and why.
Exploring the Rhythms of Life will combine
science, psychology and live performance
to reveal what happens when music meets
the mind.
Speakers:
- Susan Hallam, editor of Psychology
of Music and Head of School, Institute
of Education explores the brain mechanisms
involved in our response to music and
traces their development through infancy
and teenage years to old age, to discover
the emotional and cognitive effects that
may be the key to the power of music to
move us.
- Ian Cross, Director, Centre for
Science and Music, University of Cambridge
develops this theme with findings from
his groups' experimental investigations
into music as a cultural and biological
phenomenon. He will discuss how both humans
and animals make sense of sound, how culture
shapes our responses to it, and whether
in part our health quite literally depends
upon it.
- Paul Robertson, Visiting Professor
of Music and Medicine to the Peninsula
Medical School, and past leader of the
Medici Quartet, brings brain and culture
together to explore the scientific relation
between music and our emotions. Interweaving
live, virtuoso violin playing with a revelatory
explanation of how musicians manipulate
mood, we will enjoy a rare illustration
of the power of music to move us.
- Chaired by Anne Karpf, writer
and broadcaster.
Lisa Jamieson, Events Manager, Wellcome
Collection, said: "The fact
that the Wellbeing Series proved so popular
is testament to how important the issues
of health and happiness are becoming to
us all. Britain may be healthier and wealthier
than ever, but does that make us happier?
Using happiness, music and medicine, areas
of life familiar to everyone, the three
events provide a chance to pause and consider
what it really takes to make us happy and
keep us healthy. This series, with its mix
of speakers from science, the arts and humanities,
provides a taster to the exciting and illuminating
talks and events we will hold at the new
Wellcome Collection when it opens in 2007."
Wellcome Collection
Wellcome Collection, opening in summer 2007,
explores the relationships between medicine,
life and art in a contemporary and experimental
way, enabling visitors to think afresh about
wellbeing and human identity. The venue
itself will comprise three galleries of
permanent and temporary exhibitions, flexible
events space, the Wellcome Library, conference
facilities, café, bookshop and a
members' club. The Wellcome Trust Centre
for the History of Medicine at UCL will
also be housed in the building. The Wellcome
Collection website is www.wellcomecollection.org.uk.
END
Public Information
Tickets for Wellbeing Series
Events are FREE. Tickets must be booked in
advance and are not available on the door.
Ticket hotline: 020 7611 8442 and booking
email: events@wellcome.ac.uk
The website for Wellcome Collection is www.wellcomecollection.org.uk.
Press Information
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
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 Henry's 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 Henry's 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
Trust's former headquarters. Hopkins Architects
is managing the building's 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 world's
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 (http://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 Wellcome's 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 (http://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 Trust's 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 Trust's registered charity
number is 210183.
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