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The Mysteries of Sleeping and
Dreaming Explored
Wellcome Collection Announces Second Major Temporary Exhibition
Ron Mueck
Neurological Brain Scans
Freud
Pistol Alarm Clocks
Aristotle
Lullabies
The Beatles
Interrogation
Goya
Great
Eureka Moments
Homeless Vehicles
Bed Bugs
Sleeping and Dreaming Events Include:
Marina Abramovic's Dream Bed...Catherine Yass in conversation
and film premier
Insomnia
24 hour society
3 August 2007: Sleeping and Dreaming a groundbreaking exhibition that
combines art and medical science to explore sleep - the mysterious state
we all inhabit for a third of our lives - will be the second major temporary
exhibition at Wellcome Collection, the new public venue from the Wellcome
Trust, it was announced today.
Wellcome Collection - www.wellcomecollection.org
- opened on 21 June, 2007. During its first month of opening over 25,000
people visited and almost 1,000 took part in public events and tours.
Sleeping and Dreaming: 29 November 2007 - 10 March 2008.
Location: Wellcome Collection, 183 Euston Road, London, NW1 2BE.
Entry is free.
Public information: www.wellcomecollection.org
and +44 (0)20 7611 2222.
Press preview: 28 November 1000-1300hrs. Dr Ken Arnold, Head of
Public Programmes and James Peto, Head Curator, Temporary Exhibitions,
will lead a tour at 1130hrs.
Sleeping and Dreaming is the first of a two-part collaboration
with the Hygiene Museum, Dresden, Germany's national museum of health.
The exhibition draws together 300 objects across five major themes [detailed
below] and a public events programme, to 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.
Sleeping and Dreaming public events include Marina Abramovic's
Dream Bed, an installation in which visitors sleep and record their
dreams, and artist Catherine Yass talking about how dreams have
influenced her work and the premiere of a film inspired by her dreams.
[Events are detailed below].
The exhibition is displayed alongside Wellcome Collection's two other
permanent galleries Medicine Man and Medicine Now. Wellcome
Collection combines these galleries together with the world famous Wellcome
Library, a public events forum, café, bookshop, conference centre
and members' club to provide visitors with radical insights into the human
condition.
Sleeping and Dreaming exhibits range from work by artists Ron
Mueck and Goya through to a victim of sleep deprivation interrogation
talking about his experiences; a vehicle designed to provide homeless
people with a mobile place to sleep; bizarre alarm clocks (one of which
fires a pistol to ensure the sleeper gets up) and a large bed that visitors
can lie on and listen to traditional lullabies.
The exhibition is presented across five major themes:
Dead Tired: Is a life without sleep conceivable? Dead Tired features
Peter Tripp, an American DJ who, in 1959, broke the world record
for staying awake by going without sleep for eight days. Tripp, who was
broadcasting during the attempt, is said to have become increasingly incoherent
and to have begun hallucinating towards the end of the experiment. His
record was broken by fellow American, Randy Gardener, who stayed
awake for 11 days in 1964, and whose experiences are also featured in
the exhibition. Dead Tired explores the issues of sleep deprivation and
features a victim of Stasi sleep deprivation interrogation talking
about his experiences.
World Without Sleep: Artificial lighting has radically changed
our sleeping habits and work patterns. Daylight and the changing seasons
have given way to alarm clocks and stimulants to keep us awake. The exhibition
explores spectacular sleep experiments held in caves and bunkers during
the 1930s through to sleep in the modern world, highlighted by the Japanese
practice of inemuri, sleeping in situ regardless of the occasion, from
business meetings to parliament. An interactive exhibit gives advice on
jet lag and how to avoid it, while Paul Ramirez Jonas' Another
Day counts down the time to sunrise in 90 international cities. A
collection of bizarre 'Heath Robinson' alarm clocks illustrate the ways
in which people have woken through the ages. Examples include a clock
that lights a candle, a clock that fires a pistol, and a device that transforms
a gentleman's pocket watch into an alarm clock.
Elusive Sleep: Having a bedroom, a dedicated place for sleeping,
is a relatively new phenomenon, only becoming standard in the West in
the mid 20th Century. But a bedroom does not guarantee sleep, and how
do those without a regular place to sleep rest and dream? Elusive Sleep
features Krzysztof Wodiczko's Homeless Vehicle, a nomadic sleeping
unit for homeless people which not only provides mobility, privacy and
rest, but also functions as a political comment on social neglect. Nocturnal
disturbances are also explored. A series of 1930s public health posters
warn about the dangers of fleas and bed bugs alongside
magnified examples of these insects. Insomnia and the increasing
use of sleeping pills are also explored.
Dream Worlds: Dreaming challenges our rational model of the world.
The laws of space and time are annulled and anything is possible. Sleeping
and Dreaming examines how our dreaming and waking states intermingle:
artists often attribute their creative ideas to nocturnal inspiration.
Exhibits include Paul McCartney describing how the tune to the
Beatles' Yesterday came to him in a dream, while musician, Giuseppe
Tartini and scientist Friedrich August Kekule von Stradonitz,
attribute great discoveries to dreams. Kekule, credited as the principal
founder of the theory of chemical structure, said that the structure of
carbon bonds in Benzene came to him in a dream as a snake biting its tale.
The understanding of Benzene, and with it all aromatic compounds, provided
a huge leap forward for chemistry. Also examined in the exhibition is
Sigmund Freud's The Interpretation of Dreams. This publication,
which is widely considered as Freud's most important contribution to psychology,
placed dream-analysis at the heart of a new and radical approach to understanding
the unconscious.
Traces of Sleep: In mythology and popular culture, sleep is often
associated with other states of unconsciousness and death. The exhibition
explores these themes through exhibits ranging from Aristotle's
treatise on Sleep and Sleeplessness, in which he argues that sleep is
caused by a cooling process taking place in the heart, through to Hans
Berger's revolutionary electroencephalogram (EEG machine). Berger's
machine, developed in the 1920s, showed for the first time that the brain
never ceases to be active, even while we are asleep. His discovery debunked
earlier science and set the scene for a new genre of sleep studies. Other
exhibits include a 1930's machine designed to tune the nerves to prevent
sleepwalking and Ron Mueck's compelling Swaddled Baby.
Collaboration with Hygiene Museum, Dresden, Germany
Wellcome Collection and the Hygiene Museum have developed a unique partnership
with the aim of creating major exhibitions to be shown at both institutions.
Drawing upon their own exceptional collections, these exhibitions will
seek to engage the public on some of the most important issues relating
to human health and wellbeing.
The Hygiene Museum developed Sleeping and Dreaming and Wellcome Collection,
War and Medicine, details of which are yet to be announced. Sleeping
and Dreaming was exhibited at the Hygiene Museum from 30 March - 3
October 2007 before coming to Wellcome Collection. War and Medicine
will be on show from October 2008 - February 2009 at Wellcome Collection
before moving to Dresden.
Dr Ken Arnold, Head of Public Programmes, Wellcome Collection,
said: "Building on the huge success and public interest of The
Heart, our first thematic show, this new exhibition applies the unique
Wellcome Collection approach of freely mixing art, science and other disciplines
to subjects of universal interest: sleeping and dreaming.
"Sleeping and Dreaming is one of two major collaborations with
the Hygiene Museum in Dresden. It has already received spectacular reviews
and huge visitor numbers during its showing there."
James Peto, Head Curator, Temporary Exhibitions, Wellcome Collection
said: "Using documents and films from the world of science, together
with cultural items including historical artefacts and the work of contemporary
artists, this exhibition vividly demonstrates how the phenomena of sleeping
and dreaming have inspired people's imagination through the ages.
"The partnership with the Hygiene Museum in Dresden enables us the
public to see items from its outstanding collection alongside objects
from the Wellcome Trust and other international institutions"
Sleeping and Dreaming Public Events
Sleeping and Dreaming public events enable visitors to explore the scientific
and cultural aspects of sleep and dreams with medical and arts experts.
A full list of events will be released prior to the exhibition opening.
The list below details those already confirmed.
| Public booking information |
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| Tickets: |
All events are free, unless otherwise stated. |
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| Booking: |
Phone: 020 7611 2222, email: events@wellcomecollection.org,
or book online at: www.wellcomecollection.org/events |
Dreaming
6 December 2007, 1900 - 2030hrs
Dreams were once considered to hold major personal and religious importance.
Some cultures still consider this the case. Dreaming explores the
personal, cultural and scientific aspects of dreaming and its function
in wellbeing. Speakers: Mark Blagrove, Senior Lecturer of Psychology,
Swansea University; Iain Edgar, Senior Lecturer of Anthropology, Durham
University; Daniel Pick, Professor of Cultural and Intellectual History.
Catherine Yass in Conversation
7 February 2008, 1900 - 2130hrs
Artist Catherine Yass talks about her ideas on dreaming and her work on
the subject. Central to the talk will be a premiere of a film she has
made that captures her recounting her dreams the moment she wakes.
Marina Abramovic's Dream Bed
7 - 24 February 2008
Artist Marina Abramovic's Dream Bed will be part of the Sleeping and Dreaming
exhibition for 17 days during February 2008. During this time members
of the public can book to sleep in the Dream Bed for one hour. Participants
will don dream suits, earphones and eye masks for the hour they are in
Dream Bed, They will be asked to record their experiences in the 'Dream
Book' in which sleepers from all over the world have recorded their dreams
following their stay in the Dream Bed. Dream Bed is on loan with the kind
permission of Marina Abramovic and Sean Kelly Gallery New York where it
was on display in 2002. It has also been on show at The Rose Art Museum,
Brandeis University.
Insomnia
22 February 2008, 1900 - 2100hrs
23 February 2008, 1000 - 1600hrs
A day and a half symposium to explore insomnia through science, psychology,
history sociology, literature and art, held in partnership with the Wellcome
Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL.
Speakers Include: Kenton Kroker, Assistant Professor of Science and Technology
Studies, York University, Toronto; Professor Eluned Sumner Bremner, Department
of Women's Studies, University of Aukland; Kevin Morgan, Director of Insomnia
Research Programme at Loughborough Sleep Research Centre, Loughborough
University; Chris Idzikowski, Director, Edinburgh Sleep Centre; Professor
Russell Foster, Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of
Oxford; Frances Morris, Tate Modern.
Further details to be announced for Insomnia and the programme
is subject to change.
An End To Feeling Shattered?
28 February, 1900 - 2030hrs
Are we searching for the day when we never have to sleep? The emergence
of narcolepsy prescription drugs on the black market has show there is
public demand for healthy people to try and medicate and control the hours
they sleep. Big questions are faced by society, drug companies and medical
science - should the option to limit sleep be available?
Speakers: Dr Simon Williams, Lecturer in Sociology, Warwick Unviersity;
Julia Boyle, Deputy Head of HPRU Medical Research Centre, University of
Surrey; John Harris, Professor of Bioethics, University of Manchester.
END
Press Information
Wellcome Collection
Media Centre: www.kallaway.co.uk/wellcome.htm
Press contacts:
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
Press contacts:
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
Mike Findlay
T +44 (0)20 7611 8612
E m.findlay@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. Admission is free.
During its first month of opening over 25,000 people visited the building
and almost 1,000 took part in events or public tours.
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:
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Special exhibitions (650m2): The largest
gallery in Wellcome Collection is used to host temporary exhibitions,
presenting newly commissioned works and thematic shows structured
around topics of medical, cultural and ethical significance. The opening
exhibition is The Heart, 21 June - 16 September 2007. |
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Medicine Man (350m2): The permanent
exhibition contains more than 500 strange and beautiful artefacts
from Sir Henry Wellcome's original collection, presented in a rich
American walnut-paneled gallery, centered on a large 'Wunderkammer'
cabinet. |
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Medicine Now (350 m2): The permanent
Medicine Now exhibition explores contemporary medical topics through
the eyes of scientists, artists and popular culture in a bright contemporary
environment. |
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Public events: A lively programme of public events
expand on exhibition themes. Wellcome Collection's flexible events
space, the Forum, will bring audiences face-to-face with prominent
experts and personalities from the worlds of art, science and the
humanities, to explore current issues and ancient mysteries of human
wellbeing. There are ten events from launch until September 2007. |
Wellcome Library: The Wellcome Library contains over two million
items and is one of the world's greatest collections for the study of
the history and progress of medicine. The public areas of the Library
span two floors of Wellcome Collection and include the fully restored
Reading Room, first used as a Hall of Statuary by Sir Henry Wellcome in
1932.
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 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
the human genome
establishing
the UK Biobank
development
of the antimalarial drug artemisinin
pioneering cognitive
behavioural therapies for psychological disorders
building the
Wellcome Wing at the Science Museum
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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