The Watch Man: An installation by Shona Illingworth
02 December 2008
A major multi-media installation exploring trauma memory by
artist Shona Illingworth will be shown as part of ‘War and
Medicine’, this year’s major temporary exhibition at Wellcome
Collection.
“Shona Illingworth’s careful use of visuals and sound creates an
emotionally charged environment that evokes both the pain of the
remembered experience and the claustrophobia of feeling trapped
inside a disturbed mind.”Sandra Rehme, 'Time
Out'
Using video and sound, 'The Watch Man' explores the conflict
between trauma memory and the need for a coherent ‘life story’
through the experience of an 80-year-old watchmaker, who as a
19-year-old experienced one of the most deeply affecting and
shocking events of World War II.
The work has been made in collaboration with University of Leeds
neuropsychologist Professor Martin A Conway. Professor Conway is an
internationally recognised expert on trauma memory, confabulation
and the role of memory in the formation of a sense of self.
'The Watch Man': 16 December 2008-11 January
2009
Private view: 16 December 2008/18.30-20.30 (contact Mike
Findlay for details)
Venue: The Forum, Medicine Now Gallery, Wellcome Collection,
183 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE
Admission free
Gallery opening times: Tues-Wed, Fri-Sat: 10.00-18.00;
Thurs: 10.00-22.00;
Sun: 11.00-18.00; Closed Mon (except Bank Holidays:
10.00-18.00)
James Peto, senior curator at Wellcome Collection explains:
"With successive generations living with the after effects of
traumatic experience, this work looks at the impact of conflict on
an individual over time. Shona Illingworth’s emotive piece allows
visitors the experience of literally walking over the sound and
becoming part of the world inhabited by the watch man."
'The Watch Man' includes a large circular projection screen
suspended above an installed floor that has been painted red. A
complex sound composition surrounds the visitor, with audio high
above their heads, and resonating through a charged and reflective
surface of the constructed floor beneath their feet.
Shona Illingworth comments: “Societies need to find coherent
forms of representation for conflict is often at odds with people
left to cope privately with the painful and fragmentary nature of
trauma memory of war. 'The Watch Man' focuses on the lifetime
impact of trauma memories on an individual, the intensity with
which a deeply distressing and unresolved past continually insists
on the present and how with old age the capacity to suppress these
memories becomes weaker.”
'The Watch Man' has been supported by the Arts Council England.
Hi-shine flooring has been provided by Harlequin Floors. The
immersive sound of 'The Watch Man' piece has been made possible by
FeONIC audio technology fitted
invisibly under the floor of the exhibit.
Shona Illingworth
Shona Illingworth is known for her powerful and evocative video
and sound installations, which explore the experience of memory and
the formation of identity in situations of social tension. She has
shown her work extensively in Europe, Canada and the UK. She has
received a number of high profile awards including commissions for
Channel 4 Television, the Hayward Gallery, London and the Wellcome
Trust. She lives and works in London.
Professor
Martin Conway
Professor Martin Conway is a neuropsychologist and one of the
foremost international experts in the field of Autobiographical
Memory.
His work explores the centrality of memory to our sense of self.
He currently holds a prestigious ESRC (Economic and Social Research
Council) Professorial Fellowship at Leeds University where he has
established the new Memory Research Group. He has written
extensively on Autobiographical Memory.
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Notes to editors
Media requests:
Mike Findlay
Media Officer (Wellcome Collection)
T: 020 7611 8612
E: m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk
War and Medicine
'War and Medicine' is a groundbreaking exhibition which will
consider the continually evolving relationship between warfare and
medicine, beginning with the disasters of the Crimean War in the
1800s, and continuing through to today’s conflicts in Afghanistan
and Iraq.
'War and Medicine' is the third major temporary exhibition at
Wellcome Collection, and is the second of a two-part collaboration
with The Museum of Man (Deutsches
Hygiene-Museum, Dresden).
For more details see the Wellcome Collection's ‘War and
Medicine’ pages.
Remembering War: Your Memories
Contribute, view and share your memories of war. An
online web
resource launched on Remembrance Day, 11 November, asks users
to submit their personal memories of war. Martin Conway will
analyse the information submitted to this website.
'Remembering War: Your Memories' is part of
'Remembering War', a major symposium to coincide
with ‘War and Medicine’.
The Wellcome Trust is the largest
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