Brains: The mind as matter
Wellcome Collection | 29 March–17 June 2012
Wellcome Collection's major new exhibition looks at one of the most
complex entities in the universe. Brains: The mind as
matter (29 March to 17 June 2012) explores what humans have
done to brains in the name of medical intervention, scientific
enquiry, cultural meaning and technological change. Featuring more
than 150 objects including real brains, artworks, manuscripts,
artefacts, videos and photography, Brains follows the long
quest to manipulate and decipher the most unique and mysterious of
human organs, whose secrets continue to confound and
inspire.
Brains asks not what brains do for us, but what we have
done to brains. Famous and infamous brain specimens – including
those of Albert Einstein, Charles Babbage and William Burke – are
on display, and the exhibition is filled with thoughts on brains
from the brains of famous thinkers, together with donors, surgeons,
patients and collectors. Works by contemporary artists including
Helen Pynor, Andrew Carnie, Annie Cattrell, Susan Aldworth,
Jonathon Keats and Katharine Dowson offer personal responses to the
form and physical matter of the organ, while the cultural
significance of the rituals, rhetoric and reality of handling
brains is explored across centuries.
The exhibition has four sections. The first,
Measuring/Classifying, introduces efforts to define the
relationship between the brain's function and form. If microscopic
cellular staining techniques developed in the late 19th century
enabled a new understanding of localised neural processes, the rise
of phrenology and anthropometry demonstrates the ease with which
societal prejudice fed into analysis of outward brain shape and
size. From Bernard Hollander's cranial measuring system to the
tools and models of phrenology, used to circumscribe comparative
types of humanity, the skewed morality of these pseudo-sciences
illustrates the measuring of brains as a measure of culture.
Mapping/Modelling follows the attempts to represent the anatomy
of the brain. From early visualisations by Reisch, Vesalius and
Descartes in the 16th and 17th centuries, through beautiful 19th
century paintings by Charles Bell, to the latest kaleidoscopic
Brainbow images of nerve cells created by Jeff Lichtman and his
team, the artistic drive to apprehend the complexities of the brain
follow the increasing philosophical and medical understanding of
its centrality to our being. Wax models, used since antiquity, gain
extraordinary intricacy in renderings of the brain, and exquisite,
groundbreaking drawings of brain cells by Santiago Ramón y Cajal,
considered by many as the father of modern neuroscience, are also
on display.
Cutting/Treating explores the history of surgical intervention
on a form of human tissue that is uniquely swift to decay and
difficult to dissect. A 5000 year-old skull with holes drilled (or
trephined) into it illustrates how long humans have been
intervening directly in the matter of the brain, and the exhibition
takes a long view of tools and methods, from crude trephination
kits to bullet locators and complex Setred 3D imaging systems, and
looks at the human stories behind the anatomy (the separation of
parts by cutting) of brains. Arresting portraits of patients under
the care of Dr Harvey Cushing and his pioneering surgical
techniques at the turn of the last century sit beside the work of
artist Corrine Day, which records her as she prepares to undergo
brain surgery in 1996, while engravings of earlier patients
undergoing treatment offer a grim reminder of the realities of a
pre-anaesthetic age.
Since the 18th century, preservation techniques have enabled the
collection of specimens – including the brains of famous or
notorious individuals, which have been intricately studied in the
search for the material basis of genius, depravity and human
variation. Giving/Taking traces the stories of brain harvesting and
the variety of its purpose, from the horrors of Nazi mass murder
and experimentation to the hope offered by research into
neurodegenerative disorders by today's brain banks. Newly
commissioned photography and film of key brain archives and the
process of dissection (together with wet samples, artefacts and
moving portraits of brain donors by Ania Dabrowska), offer a
behind-the-scenes view of the brain's life after death.
The brain contains 100 billion nerve cells and some 100 trillion
synapses or neural connections; it cannot be transplanted.
Brains takes a journey around the spectacular form,
structure and condensed volume of our most revered organ, and
examines the ambiguous emotions and ethical difficulties associated
with the manipulation and dissection of the delicate substance of
consciousness.
Marius Kwint, Guest Curator, says: "Brains shows how a
single, fragile organ has become the object of modern society's
most profound hopes, fears and beliefs, and some of its most
extreme practices and advanced technologies. The different ways in
which we have treated and represented real, physical brains open up
a lot of questions about our collective minds."
Ken Arnold, Head of Public Programmes at Wellcome Collection,
says: "We all recognise its outline and know that it is the most
important part of us, but for many, the brain remains as mysterious
as it is beguiling. This exhibition presents brains of
extraordinary people among other intriguing specimens and showcases
remarkable tales from more than 500 years of scientific
investigation into the physical matter of the mind.”
Brains: The mind as matter
runs from 29 March to 17 June 2012 at Wellcome Collection,
183 Euston Road, NW1 2BE, UK.
A wide programme of events accompanies the exhibition, along
with a fully illustrated book, 'Brains: The mind as matter' by
Marius Kwint and Richard Wingate.
A Press View will be held on 27 March 2012 from
09.00–13.00. RSVP to t.morley@wellcome.ac.uk.
Notes to editors
Media contact
Tim
Morley
Senior Media Officer
T +44(0)20 7611 8612
E t.morley@wellcome.ac.uk
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