Hands
19 November 2010
From medicine to mesmerism, magic to
mannerisms, visitors will find out about the curious history of
digits, palms, fingers and thumbs, and put their own to use, as we
celebrate the organs that shape the world around us.
We will have scientists, artists, palmists and magicians at hand
for discussions, performances and, of course, hands-on activities,
all designed to make us look afresh at our body. 'Manipulate',
'manoeuvre' and 'manufacture' are all words deriving from the Latin
word 'manus', meaning hand. These creative appendages allow us to
make, touch and feel, but they also hold mystical and cultural
significance. For one night only, visitors can explore a digital
age that goes back millennia.
In auditorium talks, evolution expert Christophe Soligo will
explain how we got our hands in the first place, while Chris
McManus from UCL will uncover the science of left- and
right-handedness. The beauty of hands will be explored through a
nail bar, while Roger Kneebone and surgeons from the teaching unit
at Imperial College London will be showing how hands save lives.
Visitors will be able to handle surgical tools and, using
specialist training aids, try them out on a friend.
Healing hands and the mystery of palms will bring together Amber
Garnet, who continues a long tradition of palmistry, with the
extraordinary experiments of Birkbeck's Matthew Longo, in which a
simple coordination of movement can make a rubber hand feel like
one's own. Also, prosthetist Ian Jones will be demonstrating the
advances in replacement hands.
In the café, expect to see hand-to-hand battles over
scissors-paper-stone, thumb wars and arcade game classics, as
challenges to our digital dexterity are mapped over time. In the
atrium there will be a piano with the soundtrack for the evening
provided by visiting fingers.
Examples of handwriting written by older hands from the Wellcome
Library will be on display, including the letters of Admiral Nelson
before and after he lost his right hand. A palaeographer will
compare the writing of different eras, and visitors will be able to
try their own hand with a quill. The secrets left by their pens
will be unravelled by a graphologist who will be analysing
handwriting throughout the evening.
Andrew Dawson, acclaimed choreographer, performer and director,
will be giving performances of 'The Articulate Hand', a mesmerising
show uncovering the beauty, grace and psychological effects of hand
impairment. Dawson's work has been funded by a Wellcome Trust Arts
Award.
Another work produced for the event has been created by
14-19-year-olds from Holborn Community Association, Coram's Fields,
King's Cross and Brunswick Neighbourhood Association with the help
of artist Elaine Duigenan. They will create an immersive space
filled with clapping and doodles.
Around the building there will be a sleight-of-hand magician,
demonstrating how the hands can outwit the eyes. Mystery guests
will be circulating with secret handshakes initiating visitors into
the bonds and language of greeting.
A Lightbox display of pictures from Wellcome Images, which runs
until February 2011, will lead visitors through a colourful history
including Valentine Greatrakes, Franz Antoine Mesmer, sex scandals
in late-Victorian massage parlours, crossed palms, fortune telling,
sign language, scripts and sickness.
Visitors can also see 'High Society', Wellcome Collection's
major winter exhibition, exploring the role of mind-altering drugs
in history and culture. Tom Quick of UCL and Nick Barber, Professor
of the Practice of Pharmacy, will be in the gallery showing how
pills can be hand-made.
A feast for the fingers, and a cause for applause, 'Hands' runs
at Wellcome Collection from 19.00 to 23.00 on 26 November. Entry is
free. Drop in anytime.
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NOTES TO EDITORS
Media contact
Tim Morley
Senior Media Officer
T 020 7611 8612
E t.morley@wellcome.ac.uk
Wellcome Collection is a free visitor destination for the
incurably curious. Located at 183 Euston Road, London,
Wellcome Collection
explores the connections between medicine, life and art in the
past, present and future. The building comprises three gallery
spaces, a public events programme, the Wellcome Library, a café, a
bookshop, conference facilities and a members' club.
Wellcome Collection is part of the Wellcome Trust, a global
charitable foundation dedicated to achieving extraordinary
improvements in human and animal health. The Trust supports the
brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical humanities.
Its breadth of support includes public engagement, education and
the application of research to improve health. It is independent of
both political and commercial interests.