Skin
22 March 2010
Following the success of its recent
exhibitions, which have looked at mental health and at identity,
Wellcome Collection returns to the subject of the human body for
its summer exhibition: 'Skin'.
The skin is our largest organ. It gives us a
vital protective layer, is crucial for our sense of touch and
provides us with a highly sensitive and visible interface between
our inner body and the outside world. Spots, scars, moles,
wrinkles, tans and tattoos: the look of skin can reveal much about
an individual's lifestyle, health, age and personality, as well as
their cultural and religious background. The skin is also
remarkable for its ability to regenerate and repair itself.
The multidisciplinary exhibition 'Skin' takes
a predominantly historical approach, beginning with early
anatomical thought in the 16th and 17th centuries, when, for
anatomists, the skin was simply something to be removed and
discarded in order to study the internal organs. The story
continues through the 18th and 19th centuries and approaches its
conclusion in the 20th century, by which time the skin was
considered to be of much greater significance and studied as an
organ in its own right.
The exhibition will incorporate early medical
drawings, 19th-century paintings, anatomical models and cultural
artefacts juxtaposed with sculpture, photography and film works by
artists including Damien Hirst, Helen
Chadwick and Wim Delvoye.
The 'Skin' exhibition will be complemented by
the 'Skin Lab', which features artistic
responses to developments in plastic surgery, scar treatments and
synthetic skin technologies, including two newly commissioned works
by the artists Rhian Solomon and Gemma
Anderson. Visitors are invited to participate in an
interactive and sensory experience - experimenting with skin-flap
models used in plastic surgery, trying on latex skin-suits or
studying biological jewellery.
Skin: 10 June-26
September
Press preview: Wednesday 9 June, 09.30-13.00. A
chance to preview the exhibition and meet with the curators.
Contact Mike Findlay for details.
Venue: Wellcome Collection, 183
Euston Road, London NW1 2BE. Admission is FREE.
Javier Moscoso, Research Professor of History
and Philosophy of Science at the Spanish National Research Council
(CSIC) and curator of the exhibition, comments: "This exhibition
focuses on the historical transformation of both the scientific
understanding and cultural significance of human skin, plotting it
as beliefs, facts and popular mindsets have all evolved. Taking a
historical and cultural perspective, the exhibition showcases a
range of startling exhibits that will provoke a variety of
reactions at different levels by different types of public."
Lucy Shanahan, Wellcome Collection Curator
and co-curator of 'Skin', adds: "The last decade has revealed a
burgeoning interest and fascination with human skin, particularly
among philosophers, writers, artists and designers. Meanwhile,
regenerative medicine has seen major advances in the development of
artificial skin designed to improve the structure, function and
appearance of the body surface that has been damaged by disease,
injury or ageing. So there couldn't be a better time to get under
the surface of this subject."
The exhibition will be defined by two main
sections and two smaller sections:
Objects
The first section explores the primary
function of skin as a frontier between the inside and the outside
of the body, dramatically illustrated by a selection of images and
objects from the realms of medicine and art. It looks at flaying,
skin removal, skin fragments and the numerous portals that
interrupt the skin's surface, either exposing or leading to the
body within.
Marks
The second section will explore skin as a
place where natural, cultural, artificial or supernatural marks
inscribe themselves on the body. Human skin provides a living
document of transformation, deformity, ageing and illness. It also
serves as a canvas where personal and cultural practices of
decoration, construction of identity and self-expression are
communicated to the world.
Impressions
The third area looks the sensory nature of
skin and the delicate threshold it provides between the public and
private self.
After-life
The final section will consider the
preservation and cultural uses of skin beyond its natural
biological life, as well as what the skin reveals about death
itself.
Accompanying events programme
To coincide with the 'Skin' exhibition, a
lively programme of events will take place in Wellcome Collection.
Mostly free, these events include discussions on topics such as how
to tackle common skin complaints, the cultural and personal
significance of tattoos, as well as a two-day symposium examining
nudity in its cultural and historical context.
The full events programme will be announced in
April.
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Media contact
Mike Findlay
Senior Media Officer (Wellcome Collection)
T 020 7611 8612
E m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk
Notes to editors
Javier Moscoso is Research
Professor of History and Philosophy of Science at the Spanish
National Research Council (CSIC), Spain. He has published
extensively on the cultural history of life sciences, mainly in the
18th century. As a curator, he has organised shows at different
venues. Among them: 'Monsters and Imaginary Beings' at the National
Library in Madrid, and 'Pain. Passion. Compassion. Sensibility', a
Wellcome Trust Exhibition at the Science Museum, London.
The Wellcome Trust is a global
charity 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.
The Wellcome Trust's former headquarters, the
Wellcome Building on London's Euston Road, has been redesigned by
Hopkins Architects to become a new £30 million public venue. Free
to all, Wellcome
Collection explores the connections between medicine, life and
art in the past, present and future. The building comprises three
galleries, a public events space, the Wellcome Library, a café, a
bookshop, conference facilities and a members' club.