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A Matter of Life and Death - A
Night To Die For
Free public event from Wellcome Collection explores life and death
Premiere of a short film from two leading British artists
5 February 2007: A heavenly portal, the premiere of a short film
about near death experiences, chilli-chocolate and tequila are all part
of A Matter of Life and Death, a free one-off event celebrating and exploring
the fine line between life and death, commissioned by Wellcome Collection
(www.wellcomecollection.org.uk) and curated by Scarlet Projects.
A Matter of Life and Death, Thursday 15 March 2007,
19.30-22.00
Venue: Shoreditch
Town Hall, 380 Old Street, EC1V 9LT
Tickets: Free.
Book in advance by emailing events@wellcome.ac.uk.
A Matter of Life and Death is a foretaste to the public events
planned for Wellcome Collection, a new £30 million public
venue from the Wellcome Trust that opens in June 2007. Wellcome
Collection will explore the relationships between medicine, life and art
through permanent and temporary exhibitions and events, to provide radical
insights into the human condition.
A Matter of Life and Death is a contemporary take on Memento Mori
- a Latin phrase meaning 'remember that you must die' and used to describe
artworks that portray the brevity of life and the futility of material
longing.
The event will premiere a specially commissioned short film from artists
Onkar Singh Kular and Noam Toran. The film's three chapters
Falling, Faking and Freezing provide distinct interpretations
of the term near-death and are the focal point of an evening that encourages
visitors to consider the fine line between life and death and to reflect
upon the celebration and apprehension towards mortality. In addition,
Onkar Singh Kular and Noam Toran will also present a multi-screen installation
featuring clips from over 200 films presenting a character's dying moments:
a collage of celluloid representations of their final moments. Designers
åbäke and Martino Gamper created the exhibition
space.
An angelic gatekeeper will greet visitors and guide them into the heart
of the installation. Here they can sample life-affirming food and drink
such as chili-chocolate and tequila (served in edible pretzel glasses)
and enjoy this alternative take on the traditional Mexican Day of the
Dead festival.
Lisa Jamieson, Events Manager, said: "We're fascinated
by our mortality and medicine is obsessed with trying to delay the inevitable
and enable us, in theory, to live forever. Yet is that really what we
want? A Matter Of Life And Death explores our fear of dying in an innovative
and experimental way, and illustrates the type of contemporary events
possible in Wellcome Collection.
"The event also illustrates how activity at Wellcome Collection will
not be limited to just the building. Wellcome Collection will be a focal
point of collaboration and exploration between the arts and science and
we're pleased to be running an event in the heart of London's contemporary
art scene."
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Wellcome Collection Online Press Centre
A full description of Wellcome Collection is below. High-resolution
images and press releases can be downloaded from www.kallaway.co.uk/wellcome.htm
Press Tickets
Press tickets for the event can be booked through Kallaway on 020 7221
7883 or emailing william@kallaway.co.uk
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
Wellcome Collection: www.wellcomecollection.org.uk
Wellcome Collection Events Team
Lisa Jamieson 020 7611 8265 l.jamieson@wellcome.ac.uk
Film stills and other images
Example stills from Onkar Singh Kular and Noam Toran's film and example
Memento Mori exhibits are below. A full range stills and images can be
viewed and downloaded from www.kallaway.co.uk/wellcome-picture-library.asp
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| Credit: Stills from chapter one Falling,
© Noam Toran and Onkar Singh Kular, courtesy of the Wellcome
Trust, 2007. |
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| Credit: Stills from chapter two Faking
© Noam Toran and Onkar Singh Kular, courtesy of the Wellcome
Trust, 2007. |
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| Credit: Stills from chapter three Freezing
© Noam Toran and Onkar Singh Kular, courtesy of the Wellcome
Trust, 2007. |
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| Caption: Male and female Memento Mori figures,
c.1800, used for spiritual contemplation. Credit: Wellcome
Library, London. |
Artists' Biographies
Onkar Singh Kular: www.designmuseum.org/design/index.php?id=74
Since graduating from the Royal College of Art in 2002, Onkar Singh Kular
has firmly established himself as a leading product design talent. His
critically acclaimed Machines of Living series of products has
successfully toured Tokyo, Stockholm and Eindhoven. Supported by the Droog
design group, his work was also showcased at the Milan Furniture Fair
in April 2003. Kular uses design as a vehicle to engage with daily rituals,
from tea drinking to watching television. Kular designs innovatively respond
to domestic thematics. His acclaimed degree show included a visionary
solution to an everyday domestic problem, good tea making. A set of mugs
in each of the 128 Pantone shades of brown was developed so that each
tea drinker could accurately and easily specify the strength of their
tea in correspondence with the colour of their chosen mug. They were so
successfully received, they are now in mass production. Kular currently
holds a teaching post at Kingston University and works at the MIT Media
Lab in Dublin whilst designing a new range of products relating to our
use of the television.
Noam Toran: www.noamtoran.com
Born in Las Cruces, New Mexico, Noam Toran studied fine art and combined
commissions with set designs for theatre and film before receiving an
MA in design at the Royal College of Art in London. Noam creates films
and installations which use the language of products and their distinctive
position in culture as a means with which to investigate anomalies in
human behaviour; anomalies which specifically reflect a retaliation against
imposed social conformity. Often the products are developed for individuals
as vehicles for self-expression and a celebration of uniqueness based
on personal "quirks", desires and fantasies. The work serves
to simultaneously expand upon the conflict between citizens, corporations
and popular culture and to question the role of objects (and their designers)
as protagonists of conventionality. In almost all his work there is a
darkly humorous conflict: What types of identity do we project onto objects?
How and why do we subvert objects in order for them to achieve more complex
functionality? What does this reveal about the human condition and the
systems that organize society? His recent work has been exhibited in London,
Tokyo, Stockholm, Berlin, Paris and Jerusalem and has been published internationally.
He currently teaches at the Royal College of Art.
About Wellcome Collection
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 totalling 1350
m2, a flexible events space, the Wellcome Library, a Conference Centre,
a café, a bookshop and a 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 (650 m2)
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 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.
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 of the human genome
- Establishing the UK Biobank
- Development of the antimalarial drug Artemisinin
- Pioneering cognitive behavioural therapies for psychological disorders
- Building of the Wellcome Wing at the Science Museum.
The Wellcome Trust is a charity registered in England, number 210183.
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