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This two-day event explores productive, radical, contemporary encounters between the arts and mental health, bringing together clinical, artistic and research perspectives that offer a re-interpretation of contemporary mental health science and practice, with a view of imagining a different future.
This year's theme, Queering Boundaries, is a prompt to reflect on how boundaries define identities and fields of enquiry within mental health. Boundaries as lines of division can inhibit creative re-imagining of identities and new horizons for knowledge and practice. Arts practices are often messy ground where boundaries become fuzzy and new meanings and possibilities are given space to emerge.
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(Please note programme is being updated live)
Onsite day - 9 June
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Online day - 10 June
Thanks to our funders: Arts and Culture, Drama Department, Wolfson Institute of Population Health and Diversity and Inclusion at Queen Mary.
The event is organised by the MSc Creative Arts and Mental Health
Image: Anouk Hirschbuhl
A two day Arts and Mental Health event
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This year's theme is Masked/Unmasked – the wearing of physical masks to face the pandemic is a prompt to reflect on the metaphorical masks we wear to face the world, how we put these on to protect us from an unforgiving social world at the price of hiding the beauty of our differences. Interventions will examine how the arts can help us see behind the masks and sustain a new vision for mental health.
We welcome service users, mental health professionals, artists and researchers and any members of the general public interested in the way the arts can contribute to mental health.
Onsite day - 10 June
Book Day 1
Online day - 11 June - Live Captioning Available
Book Day 2
Thanks to our funders: Arts and Culture, Centre for History of the Emotions, Drama Department and Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Diversity and Inclusion at Queen Mary.
Mad Hearts is inviting contributions on the theme of Masked/Unmasked - whether thinking of physical masks and the pandemic, or the metaphorical masks we wear to face the world, the masks that we put on or take off in different circumstances. How do we protect ourselves from others, and how do we draw closer to others? This may take in themes of isolation, connection, compassion and flourishing. You are invited to submit a piece of creative work plus a 300 word reflection*Works and reflections that the conference conveners select as particularly pertinent to the themes of the conference will be made available on a shared online platform accessible to all conference delegates. Some will also be selected for a physical art display. Three will be nominated for a prize and invited to present at the end of the online conference Sat 11th June. * You may use any creative medium for your presentation, for example: music, dance, monologue, painting, photography, prose, poetry, sculpture. See https://sites.google.com/view/madhearts2021/home and www.outofourheads.net for examples.
Submit your work
Image: Breaking Free from the Chains of Expectations by Natasha Alia Razman
A two day online event organised by the MSc Creative Arts and Mental Health
10-11 June 2021 | Online
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Image: Shades of Solitude by Grace Catchpole
Confirmed keynote speakers:
Dr Tom Cant - Consultant Psychiatrist: 'Hopelessness is a lone voice: an introduction to Open Dialogue'
Amanda Griffith - Lived Expert Consultant: 'The Power Threat Meaning Framework'
LIVE CAPTIONING IS AVAILABLE FOR OUR KEYNOTE SPEAKER SESSIONS
Plus:
Photo from Julie McNamara's 'Voices from The Knitting Circle' - (knit1) © Zeynep Dagli
This one-day webinar explores productive, radical, contemporary encounters between the arts and mental health, bringing together clinical, artistic and research perspectives that offer a re-interpretation of contemporary mental health science and practice.
A one day online event organised by the MSc Creative Arts and Mental Health
19 June 2020 | Online
Mad Hearts: Arts and Mental Health Conference Brochure [PDF 392KB]
This two-day conference explores productive, radical, contemporary encounters between the arts and mental health, bringing together clinical, artistic and research perspectives that offer a re-interpretation of contemporary mental health science and practice.
Thematic sessions will range from the importance of narrative and meaning making in mental health, to the pedagogical use of the arts as progressive intervention, and arguments for a radical shift in mental health practice. The programme is enriched by theatre performances on the theme of mental health and an art exhibition. Delegates will have the opportunity to contribute their responses through a 'long table' discussion; this will provide the stimulus for the panel discussion with stakeholders and international experts that will round off the conference.
We welcome mental health professionals, researchers and any members of the general public interested in the way the arts can contribute to mental health.
For more information please contact: Maria Turri m.turri@qmul.ac.uk