Plans for a multi-million pound community health hub in the London borough of Barnet have been axed as part of the...
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Plans for a multi-million pound community health hub in the London borough of Barnet have been axed as part of the...
The House of Commons Culture Media & Sport Select Committee is currently investigating a range of issues as part...
On April 8th LAHF is bringing together artists and art therapists working with a range of artforms from across the country to examine the ways in which professionals using art in healthcare settings can learn from each other.
The half day seminar (which begins at 12pm and includes lunch) will include presentations from the Northern Centre for Cancer Treatment where artists work directly with therapists and from the Birmingham Centre for Art Therapies as well as panel discussions looking at the points of overlap between arts therapy and artists working in healthcare.
Speakers include: Malcolm Learmonth (British Association of Arts Therapists), Lisa Davey (Music in Hospitals) Lorraine von Gehlen (Inspire Arts) and Norma Daykin (Professor of Arts in Health - University of West of England) as well as artists, Dramatherapists and musicians. The event will take place at Arts Council England’s offices in Farringdon.
Places at the seminar are strictly limited and more than half the places have now been allocated. To reserve a place, please contact damian@lahf.org.uk
There are a handful of places left for our event later this month which offers a free taster session of the outreach programme run by Tate Modern. This event will include an introduction to Tate Modern’s outreach programme led by Liz Ellis, Curator of the Community Programme followed by introductions to the gallery’s collection led by artist educators.
Tate Modern runs this regular outreach programme for community groups attracting a wide range of adult groups from non-formal education, social and health settings. This event will offer LAHF members a sense of how the programme works and an opportunity to debate the ways in which programmes like this can integrate with other arts in health activity in London.
The event will take place on Wednesday 12th March from 10.30am – 1pm. Places will be reserved on a strictly first come first served basis, for more details contact Damian Hebron: Damian@lahf.org.uk
This Wednesday, LAHF members are invited to an artist talk to examine the impact on artists’ practice of residencies in hospitals.
Malcolm Glover, a photographer who has undertaken numerous hospital residencies has just completed a residency with the support of the Max Reinhardt Charitable Trust and Paintings in Hospitals who selected Glover as the recipient of the third Alexandra Reinhardt Memorial Award. An exhibition of Malcolm Glover’s work is being staged at the Menier Gallery, Menier Chocolate Factory, London from the 4th to the 15th March. The talk will take place at 5.30pm on Wednesday 5th March and will feature Malcolm Glover and Stuart Davie, Director of Paintings in Hospitals.
The event is designed to look at the ways in which artists can work in healthcare settings and to explore the opportunities for artists to develop work in this way. The event will include an opportunity to see the exhibition and to network informally with artists and arts in health practitioners. For more information or to register interest, e: Damian@lahf.org.uk
LAHF members are invited to attend the private view of a new exhibition of work examining the treatment of cancer. The exhibition showcases the work of French visual artist Patrick Altes who was artist in residence at the Sussex Cancer Centre at Royal Sussex Hospital in Brighton for ten months last year during which time he documented the role of oncologists in cancer treatment.
A former cancer patient himself, Altes says "Medicine is closely linked to our primal need for survival and we relate to doctors in a complex way; when exposed to something as frightening as cancer, we see them as healers, rather than just a vehicle for science doling out treatment to put us back on track. I'm interested in how doctors are affected by the tolls of straddling sophisticated scientific medicine alongside the emotional burden of treating a fearful illness."
The private view will incorporate a panel discussion examining the role of oncologists in light of the exhibition. The discussion will be chaired by Professor Michael Baum, Professor Emeritus of Surgery and visiting Professor of Medical Humanities at University College of London, and will feature Patrick Altes, Professor Lesley Fallowfield of Cancer Research UK, and Dr David Bloomfield, Clinical Director of the Sussex Cancer Centre.
The event will run from 6pm to 8.30pm on Tuesday 5th February at the Menier Chocolate Factory, 51 Southwark Street, London SE1. The exhibition continues until 10th February.
For more information or to confirm attendance, contact Damian@lahf.org.uk
In recent years, the development of new healthcare facilities has often involved using the arts as a means of creating accessible buildings with a link to local communities. Several new health centres and GP practices around the country have placed the arts at the heart of building practices resulting in improved community engagement and, in some cases creating new focal points for fragmented neighbourhoods. However, the impact of the arts on these projects can be hard to monitor and can create challenges for architects and clinicians.
For the conclusion of its series of events looking at community healthcare and the arts, London Arts in Health Forum is bringing together doctors, architects and artists who have been involved in the development of innovative new community practices to discuss the issues that arise when the arts are used in this way.
On November 8th, LAHF is offering members an exclusive tour of the landmark Bromley by Bow Centre.
Now recognised as a model of how to integrate an arts programme into community healthcare practice, the Bromley by Bow Centre offers a diverse range of arts based activities as well as providing workshop space for artists.
The tour will include presentations from three of the artists currently working with the Centre and promises to be an exciting opportunity to see how the arts can be used to influence healthcare provision in community settings.
The tour will take place on Thursday November 8th from 3.30pm – 5.30pm.
Places on the tour will be reserved on a strictly first come first served basis and much interest has already been expressed in this event.
To reserve a place, please contact Damian Hebron e: Damian@lahf.org.uk.
LAHF is proud to be co-hosting the launch of Spring Forward, a celebration of creativity and its importance for promoting health and wellbeing in the community. Spring Forward is a month-long cavalcade of all the creative events, exhibitions, workshops and talks happening across Lambeth as part of the celebrations for World Mental Health Day.
The launch event is an exciting evening of performance and discussion focusing on the role the arts can play in fostering mental health and wellbeing in the community.
The evening will feature a performance by Lambeth and Southwark's Community Choir, discussions and an opportunity to explore the new Springfield Primary Care Centre and the artwork which has been commissioned for it.
The next LAHF event will take place on 11th July at Royal Brompton Hospital and will focus on the innovative TRANSPLANT project.
Wednesday 11th July
12.30pm start
Royal Brompton Hospital
Tim Wainwright (photography) and John Wynne (sound art) have now just completed a year-long residency at Harefield Hospital where they have interviewed and photographed 40 patients and relatives, and numerous members of staff. The residency will result in twenty four large photographs being integrated into bespoke ‘flat speakers’, making the images themselves the source of sounds. The artists have also maintained an audio-visual web diary thetransplantlog.com and the work is now being collated in preparation for an installation later this year in a London gallery, as well as a DVD and catalogue.
This event will form part of UK Transplant Week. The event will begin at 12.30pm with refreshments and a performance from 'Los Musicos' and there will be presentations from the artists and the opportunity to find out more about this ground-breaking project.
Attendance is free to members but places are limited. For more information, please contact Damian@lahf.org.uk.
LAHF is collaborating with Paintings in Hospitals and the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre in Oxford to present a talk and a private view of work from a residency by artist Miranda Creswell.
The exhibition, Stop, Turn Move, depicts NHS staff from surgeons to engineers and metal workers in the act of working. Encompassing drawings, paintings and short films, the exhibition also includes a sculpture developed by patients and pupils local to the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre.
LAHF has several events planned for the next few months. The first of these is a tour of the South Kensington and Chelsea Mental Health Centre to explore the work of The Nightingale Project.