Wellcome Trust plays dirty with new season of activities
DIRT season |
until 26 September 2011
Obsessively avoided
and often misunderstood, dirt - and our complex relationship with
it - is the subject of a new season from Wellcome
Trust running until September 2011.
We live in
unmistakeably filthy times. For the first time in human history,
over half the world's inhabitants live in urban environments, and
exposure to dirt comes with overcrowding, inadequate sanitation and
the industrial shaping of metropolitan life. Meanwhile, scientists
are debating whether our increasing obsession with cleanliness is
stripping away our ability to combat infection. However we may wish
to sweep it under the carpet or wash our hands of it, this is a
subject that continues to make its mark.
Running from March to
September, the DIRT season will feature online games, events at
special dirty locations from Glasgow to Glastonbury, and a major
exhibition Dirt: The filthy reality of everyday life at
Wellcome Collection, London. Get dirty with us at the Dirt Season website.
Wellcome Trust's Dirt Season
Filth Fair
(from 1 March)
Roll up! Roll up! Enter the Filth Fair, a word-puzzle
game for iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad and online. Developed
with Toytek, this app and website gets down and dirty with cryptic
gameplay and stunning visuals, based on a specially commissioned
painting by best-selling author Mike Wilks. 333 hidden words are
buried in objects around the Filth Fair, and the player's
task is to find and identify them all. This free-to-play game has
extensive social network integration and support.
Dirt: the Filthy
Reality of Everyday Life (24 March-31 August)
A major exhibition at Wellcome Collection, London, which travels
across centuries and continents to explore our ambivalent
relationship with dirt. Bringing together around 200 artefacts
spanning visual art, documentary photography, cultural ephemera,
scientific artefacts, film and literature, the exhibition uncovers
a rich history of disgust and delight in the grimy truths and dirty
secrets of our past, and points to the uncertain future of filth,
which poses a significant risk to our health but is also vital to
our existence. A full series of events, symposia and activities
support the exhibition.
Eden
Project (28 May-5 June)
During half term, Eden Project will be telling visitors all there
is to know about poo! Find out about the magic of manure; the weird
things it's used for, why it smells and what it's made of. Look at
loos of the past, discover how they evolved to the flush system
that we have today, and take part in the 'flush game' to see what
happens once you pull the chain and where it goes next!
Dirty
Banquet (2 April)
Guerilla Science, working in partnership with experimental food
artisans Bompas & Parr, will host a Dirty Banquet inside a
spectacular secret London location. This feast of filth will
showcase dirty delicacies, such as haggis, peaty Islay whisky,
fermented kimchi, civet coffee, and charcoal-cleansed Thames water
- each course inspired by the physical, biological, ethical,
architectural, social, political and temporal dimensions of dirt.
Wellcome Trust-funded researchers and lecturers will accompany each
course, feeding guests with ideas about the nature of dirt:
anthropologist Val Curtis will guide through the evolution of
disgust, and epidemiologist Elizabeth Pisani, author of The
Wisdom of Whores, will speak on sexuality.
Scratch-and-sniff card (April)
A special interactive card created by Wellcome Trust and the BBC,
allowing viewers to smell their way around the upcoming Filthy
Cities series in April. The card will take in dirty smells from New
York to London to Paris. You'll be able to pick up the card at
other DIRT season events.
Glastonbury (22-26 June)
Working with Guerilla Science, the Wellcome Trust will bring a
Decontamination Unit to Shangri La - Glastonbury's two-storey
after-hours pleasure city of sin and sleaze. This year, an
infectious and terrifying disease has broken through the
metropolis, forcing panicked and contaminated citizens to flee. The
only way to achieve purity, cleanliness and salvation is through
the Decontamination Unit: a tightly controlled zone of
disinfection. At the entrance, microbiologists and psychologists
will assess the contaminated revellers and determine if they
require physical or moral decontamination: one route leads to the
spilling of dirty secrets and psychological purging, the other
to physical purification, complete with a chemical spray and a
biohazard suit. After winding their way through our cleansing
chambers, the purified will exit through a skywalk onto the
pristine second level of Shangri La, having escaped the world of
filth, and embark into a brave, clean new world.
Secret Garden
Party (21-24 July)
Guerilla Science and Wellcome Trust are hosting a dirty day at one
of the UK's most colourful and riotous music festivals, the Secret
Garden Party. With dirty dance-offs, a spectrum of dirty habits, a
naughty writing workshop, an audience with a smelly tweeter and
celebrations of odour in human behaviour, expect much dishing of
dirt and filthy good fun. At sunset, they will host a dirty
banquet (building on the one held in London on 2 April with
experimental food artisans Bompas & Parr), complete with dirty
delicacies and salacious speakers.
Late Summer
Festival (TBC)
We're haven't quite cleaned up with the summer festivals yet and
have plenty more muck to rake and dirt to share. Get dirty with
Wellcome Trust in September at a special venue to be
announced.
Glasgow (2-6 September)
The Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery are joining forces with
Wellcome Trust to explore infection and pollution, from middens to
microbiology. Talks, tours and tea parties will explore the city's
industrial legacy, Scottish encounters with tropical diseases, and
the history of health in Glasgow. Five days of getting down and
dirty in the city will include a dirty tea party, drop-in hands-on
activities covering waste management, forensic archaeology, signs
of disease, hygiene and hand washing, a poster display, science
busking, series of short lunchtime talks, a Cafe Scientifique
event, city tours and filth-ridden infected films. The programme is
inspired by the Hunterian's astonishing science and medical
collections, as well as the world class research being undertaken
in the University of Glasgow.
Glasgow (23-26 September)
The DIRT season comes to a suitably messy end with Dirt and
Digestion, a digestive adventure at the Glasgow Science Centre
- part of a weekend of grimy family fun that also
includes Infection Detection events where visitors can solve
bacterial mysteries with UV fluorescence, interactive games and
lots of hands-on activities. Morning master classes will run for
adults, looking in more detail at current cutting-edge research on
the theme. You can also join in online and enter our 'Living with
Dirt' photo competition which will launch late summer.
The DIRT season from Wellcome Trust runs from
until 26 September 2011. Details at www.dirtseason.org.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES TO
EDITORS
Media contact
Tim Morley
Senior Media Officer
T 020 7611 8612
E t.morley@wellcome.ac.uk
The Wellcome
Trust is a global charitable foundation dedicated to
achieving extraordinary improvements in human and animal health. It
supports the brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical
humanities. The Trust's breadth of support includes public
engagement, education and the application of research to improve
health. It is independent of both political and commercial
interests. http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/