Stempra

 

 



 

Spring 2008


From the Chair

New members

Sci Comm news
Eurochat

Feature: Promoting conferences

Feature: Wellcome Collection preview

Feature: WCSJ:2009

Event Report: Working with documentary makers

Event Report: Crisis management

Interview: Alok Jha, The Guardian's Science correspondent

 

Stempra newsletter

FEATURE: Wellcome Collection preview: Cupcakes meet Antony Gormley meet Wi-Fi Access

Wellcome Collection, the Wellcome Trust's eagerly anticipated public gallery and museum, has gone from strength to strength since opening in June of last year. It has exceeded expectation in terms of audience figures, boasting over 170,000 visits in the last eight month alone (the target figure for the first year was 100,000). Given its lively exhibitions and events programme is it any wonder that London's latest venue committed to exploring the relationship between medicine, life, and art (or should that be the relationship between cupcakes, Antony Gormley's sculpture and WiFi access?) has just been announced in the running for the national Art Fund Prize?

Highlights from last year's programme include: 22-year-old heart transplant success story, Jennifer Sutton, visiting her 'old' heart in the gallery as part of the aptly called ‘The Heart' exhibition; eminent surgeon Frank Wells performing a live open heart surgery – broadcast from Papworth Hospital in Cambridge to an audience of over 200 in Wellcome Collection; and a late-night film extravaganza exploring the themes of the Sleeping & Dreaming exhibition.

2008 is set to build on the successes of 2007. An analysis of twenty-six skeletons selected from the Museum of London's 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 just some of the highlights to look forward to over the coming year. [See full exhibitions programme below for details]

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 29 November and closes on 9 March 2008.

Why delay? Visit Wellcome Collection today.

Mike Findlay
Wellcome Trust Media Office

020 7611 8612
m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk

Exhibitions Programme for 2008

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.

For more details see: www.wellcomecollection.org

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