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Rebound
Two decades of notes on HIV in London
UK's first exhibition examining the changing
perception of HIV in London
Wellcome Collection 11-28 October
2007
27 September 2007:
A solo exhibition coming to London's latest
visitor attraction will, for the first time,
explore the changing perception of HIV in
the UK's capital city over the last 20 years.
'Rebound' will be shown at Wellcome Collection
- a new cultural venue on London's Euston
Road - between 11 and 28 October, and will
reveal the sketches and diary notes of artist
Paul Ryan. The materials provide a compelling
insight into the HIV epidemic in London
from 1987, when the first clear information
about the disease emerged, to 2007, by which
time successful treatments have been established.
The title of the exhibition - 'Rebound'
- refers to the experience of declining
health and hopes of those affected by HIV,
which hit a low point in the mid 1990s before
'rebounding' to restored health for many
and optimism for the future. A recurrent
theme of the exhibition is 'intimacy' and
the barriers that HIV positive people face
when disclosing their status.
The 20-year period will be represented by
a wall-mounted, linear, chronological display
of notebooks. Larger drawings will sit alongside
a specially commissioned wall drawing.
"The sketchbooks have become a bit
of a habit, but hopefully a useful one,"
explains Paul Ryan. "They map out 25
years of my adult life in a way my mind
couldn't, and help to jog my inner memories
too. Exhibiting them in Wellcome Collection
frames these personal accounts in a medical
context, rather than a conventional art
gallery, picking out the themes of HIV in
London. It is always important to remember
the connection between how illness and medicine
make us 'feel', as much as the 'look' of
the science."
Clare Matterson, Wellcome Trust Director
of Medicine, Society and History comments:
"'Rebound' looks closely at the shift
from pessimism to optimism for the treatment
of HIV patients. The sketchbooks show a
clear narrative on how people face up to
the realities of their status, and the reactions
for those around them."
AIDS and HIV have affected Londoners in
changing ways over the last two decades.
The numbers of people diagnosed continues
to rise. Between 2001 and 2005, new HIV
diagnosis increased by 14 per cent. In 2005,
the number of people accessing NHS care
for HIV who lived in London was 22 236,
which was a 12 per cent increase from 2004.*
Nick Partridge, Chief Executive of Terrence
Higgins Trust said: "So much has happened
since the start of the HIV epidemic 25 years
ago. Remembering the people who have played
their part in this story so far is vitally
important. London has been the epicentre
of the UK's epidemic, and this exhibition
will provide a fascinating personal perspective."
Rebound Talk Saturday 27 October, 15:00-16:30
FREE: To coincide with Paul Ryan's solo
exhibition at Wellcome Collection, the artist
will be talking with Dr Jane Anderson (Director
for the Centre for the Study of Sexual Health
and HIV at Homerton University Hospital
NHS Foundation Trust) and Angelina Namiba
- Policy and Involvement Manager at Positively
Women - about how lives, treatments and
feelings have changed over the last two
decades. Together with the audience they
will not only recall these changes but also
mark out what HIV means in London today,
and what it might mean in the future. To
book this free event, please visit www.wellcomecollection.org/events
or call 020 7611 2222.
'Rebound' will exhibit
at Wellcome Collection, 183 Euston Road,
London from 11-28 October. Access to the
gallery is free.
The open times are Tuesdays, Wednesday,
Fridays and Saturdays 10:00 - 18:00, Thursdays
10:00 - 22:00 and Sundays 11:00 - 18:00.
Preview evening A preview of Rebound
will take place on 10 October at 18:30.
There will be a unique opportunity to meet
with the artists and others involved in
the project. Press wanted to attend should
RSVP: m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk.
*Statistical information for Terrence Higgins
Trust (July 2007).
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Media Contact:
Mike Findlay
Media Officer
Wellcome Trust
T +44 (0)20 7611 8612
E m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk
Paul Ryan was born in Leicester
in 1968 and lives and works in London. He
completed an MA in Fine Art Drawing at Wimbledon
School of Art, London in 2004 and is currently
carrying out research towards his PhD under
The University of the Arts, London entitled:
"Peirce's Semeiotic and the Implications
for Aesthetics in the Visual Arts. An Extemporary
Case Study: The Sketchbook and its Position
in the Hierarchies of Making, Collecting
and Exhibiting." He has exhibited extensively
from Tate Liverpool, Imperial War Museum,
ICA, British Museum and overseas in Lithuania,
Norway Latvia and Belgrade. http://www.paulryan.dircon.co.uk
The Wellcome Library, Europe's leading
resource for the study of history of medicine,
has been collecting ephemera and pamphlets
about AIDS / HIV since 1989. The collection
contains a wide selection of, often very
unusual, material promoting safer sex and
condom use as well as items documenting
support groups, centres and initiatives
and educational material aimed at the general
public explaining what AIDS / HIV is. Additionally
there are 166 folders of source material
that was used for the monthly AIDS Newsletter
(1985-96) documenting everything from tabloid
hysteria to conferences for the medical
profession. The Library contains the largest
UK collection of AIDS campaign posters from
throughout the world. The 3,000 posters
show how public understanding of the epidemic
has changed from the early days to the present.
Since opening to the public on 21 June this
year, Wellcome Collection has attracted
70,000 visitors through its doors. Wellcome
Collection, the Wellcome Trust's former
headquarters on London's Euston Road, has
been redesigned by Hopkins Architects to
become a new £30m venue. Free to all,
Wellcome Collection explores the connections
between medicine, life and art in the past,
present and future. Wellcome Collection
houses over 1,0000 exhibits across three
galleries and uses contemporary and experimental
techniques to challenge and inspire visitors
to consider issues of science, health and
human identity through the ages. Wellcome
Collection also includes a 'Forum' for public
events, the world famous Wellcome Library,
a conference centre, café, and bookshop.
The building also houses the Wellcome Trust
Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL.
For more details see: www.wellcomecollection.org.uk.
The
Wellcome Trust is the largest charity
in the UK. 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.
http://www.wellcome.ac.uk
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