Saturday, May 24, 2014

You cannot restrict the mind's capacity




Last Thursday, the North West Arts and Health Network was proud to host an over-subscribed event led by Mike White from the Centre for Medical Humanities. With a presentation entitled - Randomised Thoughts, Controlled Ramblings and a few Trialised Thoughts - we knew we were going to get something mischievous from this cross-Pennine foray into the historical arts and health, hilltop fortress that is Mamucium (or rather the Manchester Art School), and Mike didn’t let us down. Opening his presentation with Psycho Killer by the Talking Heads, he took us on a journey that conjoined his early work by way of Welfare State International to the possibilities of generating new traditions. 

Blasting the crass commercialism of the Baguette of the North and imploring us to share something of the spiritus mundi, Mike framed much of his presentation in David Byrne’s ‘slow dawning insight about creation,’ that 'context is everything.' Urging us to consider Bevan’s collective commitment to social habits and offering the best we can give to society, he subverted the context of health and safety from authoritative and risk-averse control, to caring for each other. His own work illustrated perfectly how investing in children and young people reaps dividends in generational change, not least in creating young researchers who inform new ways of thinking, being and doing.



Discussing the current ‘trends’ in research and evaluation, he poked a blunt stick in the side of reductionists and reflected on the range of documents ‘out there’ and drew from the 2004 Kings Fund report: Finding Out What Works: Building Knowledge about complex, community-based initiatives, as one of the most useful.

For me, there were some key messages from his presentation and the illuminating and animated formal and informal discussions that followed. He raised some fundamental questions, of which these a few, and which I will leave hanging in the air for you to ponder:
  • Why does the state fund the arts?
  • What is health for?
  • How do we better disseminate evidence?
On the final question and that of the 40+ members of the fledgling Arts and Health Research Network, we had a short discussion about the ongoing role of the National Alliance for Arts, Health and Wellbeing and alongside the burgeoning archive of research data held at MMU, how this might be made freely available to a wider international community. More on this soon. His discussion of being at the crossroads in research and of having the ‘empirical highway’ or the ‘lantern road,’ resonated with some and was questioned by others (see below), but for me echoed the dangers of thinking that one size fits all. The agendas of those working in clinical settings and those working in communities have shades and nuances that can’t be aggregated into one crude ‘measurement.’



For my own part, the constant cries for a Gold Standard in arts/health research is horribly flawed. After all, it seems it's the big pharma model that’s being held up. Well, that objectivity isn’t skewed by greed and manipulation, is it? When Gold is used in our context, might it be more appropriate to think in terms of Gold Methods and not Standards? More subtle, reflexive and appropriate. 

Whilst there is room for diversity in the way we understand cultural value and the subtle impacts of creativity and the arts across societies, context is critical, as is placing people at the heart of what it is that we do - not simply seeing them as subjects to be ‘done to.’

I was struck by a sense of shared vision with those present and Mike embodied what I can only describe as an authentic voice in this arts/health field. So often, the agenda is scuppered by those looking to patent their ideas or position themselves as central to a field which Mike so clearly illustrates is emergent and ever changing. His own slow and honest dawning insight in this journey, is enriching to be a part of. I can only say thank you Mike. 



coda 1
There is a tradition of radical thinking in Manchester, a place that urbanist Anna Minton describes as the ‘bellwether for social change in Britain.’ It has been a temporary home to Engels and Marx and the Pankhurst family were residents, the city arguably being instrumental in universal suffrage and the co-operative and working-class movements - deluded or not - I think of this arts/health movement as having strong roots in this place and tradition too.

As part of what Mike describes as this small scale global phenomenon, the good citizens of the People’s Republic of Arts and Health (AKA the NW Network) would like to confer upon him the honour of citizenship and thus, our highest award, that of honorary Mamucium Republican. Judging by all the extended email signatures of my esteemed colleagues in academia - which seem to be growing day-by-day with fellowships, societies and much conflated (oft purchased or self generated) clap-trap - this means he can now refer to himself proudly as MR (Hons).

Much as though I tried to audio record the event for those of you who could’t attend, the quality of the sound is appalling, so it will be left for those of us who attended to disseminate his thoughts through loud-hailers on street corners, or hushed whispers on hospital corridors. I also offer some quick reflections from some of the people who attended.


9 reflections...

“...I found his talk to be thoughtful, sensitive and full of respect for the participants he has worked with. It was a pleasure to listen to and a reminder of the power of creativity to bring communities together and to transform people’s lives.”

“...As always Mike was inspiring and it was really great to hear someone talking about the realities of our work. A great spokesman for what we are all doing.”

“...the image of a fork in the road frightens me as it feels that these directions are moving away from each other, which feels pretty hopeless! {…} developing our smaller scale artist led research I have found my path much more meandering with my practice and those I practice with…”

“... I'm inspired by the lantern and transition projects and would like to initiate a new project with my local community.”

“...what has touched me the most and made me think deeply? Having a motivating aesthetic - it's what drives my work, only that I had never found the words to describe it so greatly. Oh - and 'Psycho Killer' is in my top 5 favourite songs ever.”

“... succinct and informative - from embedding 'memories' into a calendar to the debates surrounding cultural contexts and a need to follow one's intuition concerning local needs, research and funding.”

“...I was fascinated with the concept of 'flourishing' and whether one can flourish even in ill health. I would answer a definite 'yes' to that from experiences both personal and professional. The networking afterwards was great too. So useful to talk with others exactly on your wavelength!” 

“...he blows the instrumentalists out of the water…”

“...as engaging and challenging a figure you could ever hope to meet holding a lantern at the crossroads…”

...and following in the footsteps of MR White, Winston Churchill
The Winston Churchill Memorial Trust has announced its areas of interest for the next round of fellowships. These involve travel for from 4 to 8 weeks to one or more countries to look at examples of best practice, innovation and inspiration, and then return to disseminate these experiences for the benefit of the Fellow’s organisation or community. Some of this year’s areas:

-  The Arts and Older People
-  Early Years Prevention and Intervention
-  Environment and Sustainable Living
-  Prison and Penal Reform
-  Young People 18-25
-  Medicine, Health and Patient Care
-  Science, Technology and Innovation

These are available to anyone (UK citizen) ‘with a passion for their subject,’ and so the focus is as much, if not more, on practitioners and professionals as on academic personnel. If you are interested in applying, or know practitioners/professionals who might be good applicants, the information is available by clicking on Churchill's own private war room below.
The deadline for applications is September 23, 2014.



Wingate Foundation – Performing Arts grants
Deadline: 23 June, 19 September & 12 December 2014
The Wingate Foundation’s Performing Arts grants programme is open for applications (this does not include music, which has a separate fund). Particular emphasis is given to providing financial support for not-for-profit companies with a record of artistic excellence that require additional funding (not available from public sources or commercial sponsorship) to broaden their repertoire or develop work of potentially outstanding interest. Assistance will also be considered for training and professional development for creative talent or the technical professions. Read more at: http://www.wingatefoundation.org.uk/sc_performing_arts.php

Paying Artists campaign: website launches as support grows
A new campaign aimed at securing a fair deal for artists working with publicly funded galleries in the UK is launched today. Led by a-n and AIR, the Paying Artists campaign comes after research revealed that more than 70% of artists are not paid for contributing their work to publicly-funded exhibitions. Almost as many have turned down offers from galleries because they can’t afford to work for nothing. The campaign, which has its own dedicated website and is supported by some of the UK’s leading arts organisations including the Design and Copyright Society (DACS), Artquest, Axisweb, NSEAD and Arts Development UK. International support has come from the Swedish Artists’ National Organisation, CARFAC in Canada and Visarte in Switzerland.

Susan Jones, director of a-n the Artists Information Company, said: “Unless we start valuing the artist as well as the art, in future galleries will only be showing work by the privileged few who can afford to work for nothing. The Paying Artists campaign is about tackling the inequalities faced by artists and giving galleries and the visiting public access to quality art that genuinely covers the spectrum of human experience.” http://www.payingartists.org.uk



Aphorisms on Futurism (1914) by Mina Loy (part 2)

LET the Universe flow into your consciousness, there is no limit to its capacity, nothing that it shall not re-create.

UNSCREW your capability of absorption and grasp the elements of Life—Whole.

MISERY is in the disintegration of Joy;
Intellect, of Intuition;
Acceptance, of Inspiration.

CEASE to build up your personality with the ejections of irrelevant minds.

NOT to be a cipher in your ambient,
But to color your ambient with your preferences.

NOT to accept experience at its face value.

BUT to readjust activity to the peculiarity of your own will.

THESE are the primary tentatives towards independence.

MAN is a slave only to his own mental lethargy.

YOU cannot restrict the mind’s capacity.

THEREFORE you stand not only in abject servitude to your perceptive consciousness — BUT also to the mechanical re-actions of the subconsciousness, that rubbish heap of race-tradition — AND believing yourself to be free—your least conception is colored by the pigment of retrograde superstitions.

HERE are the fallow-lands of mental spatiality that Futurism will clear—
MAKING place for whatever you are brave enough, beautiful enough to draw out of the realized self.

TO your blushing we shout the obscenities, we scream the blasphemies, that you, being weak, whisper alone in the dark.

THEY are empty except of your shame.

AND so these sounds shall dissolve back to their innate senselessness.

THUS shall evolve the language of the Future.

THROUGH derision of Humanity as it appears—
TO arrive at respect for man as he shall be—
ACCEPT the tremendous truth of Futurism
Leaving all those

                       Knick-knacks.

This blog is a-political - honestly! I just have to say this. One trick-pony jingoistic deluded zealots. Thank goodness for those spirits and minds that influence and feed me and this movement. All hail colleagues, immigrants and friends who infect me with ideas and challenge apathy. Thank you. The world is rich and diverse. Albion is small and needs your input.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Die in the Past, Live in the Future...

Un grandissimo grazie a tutti voi che  avete partecipato agli eventi per il Recoverist Manifesto a Pistoia e Pescara questa settimana. Io e Cristina siamo stati contentissimi di essere stati accolti in maniera tanto meravigliosa da tutti voi. Grazie infinite. Adesso che abbiamo condiviso un po' di  idee, di passioni e di sogni su quel che vogliamo, butteremo tutte le nostre parole in un pentolone e inizieremo a cuocere un po' di deliziosa poesia a fuoco lento. Le vostre parole, e le nostre aspirazioni. Ancora una volta - grazie - per aver partecipato, organizzato, per esservi messi alla prova ed aver condiviso. Non appena avremo una prima bozza del Recoverist Manifesto, la condividermo con tutti voi tramite i nostri amici di FeDerSerD e Gruppo Incontro.



Thank you to everyone who has expressed interest in coming to the networking event and presentation with Mike White on Thursday evening between 4:00 and 6:30. As I said in last week’s blog posting, I’ll confirm places by email on Tuesday and of course, where the event will take place in the university. Last places before Tuesday 13:00 by registering at artsforhealth@aol.com 



A short and sweet blog this week. Light on polemic but littered with funding, commissions and Aphorisms on Futurism (1914) by Mina Loy. (part 1)

Artists commissions at The Walton Centre
As part of the major development of a new 3 storey building at The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust, LIME Arts wish to commission visual artists for three separate projects at £12k, £9k and £12k. More details by clicking on The Waltons below!



Wellcome Trust - Peoples and Society Awards 
Funding is available under the Wellcome Trust's Peoples and Society Awards for projects that encourage public debate and understanding of biomedical science. Projects can include:
Workshops and seminars
Arts projects for various different audiences and age groups
Teaching materials or techniques to encourage wider discussions; etc.
The People Awards (up to and including £30,000) are for innovative and creative projects in the UK and/or the Republic of Ireland that engage the public with biomedical science and/or the history of medicine. They can fund small-to-medium-sized one-off projects or projects that pilot new ideas with an aim to scale up or become sustainable following the grant, or they can part-fund larger projects.

Society Awards (above £30,000) can fund the scaling-up of successfully piloted projects (whether funded through People Awards or through other means) or can fund projects that are more ambitious in scale and impact than is possible through a People Award. Society Award projects would normally expect to reach audiences with a wide geographical spread across the UK and/or Republic of Ireland. They can also part-fund larger projects. Funding can be for up to three years. Applications can be made by a wide variety of individuals, organisations and partnerships.

The next closing date for applications for the People Awards is the 25th July 2014 and the 3rd October for the Society Awards. Read more by clicking on the snazzy pullover below! 



Music Grants for Older People 
The registered charity, Concertina which makes grants to charitable bodies which provide musical entertainment and related activities for the elderly has announced that the next deadline for applications is the 31st October 2014. The charity is particular keen to support smaller organisations which might otherwise find it difficult to gain funding. Since its inception in 2004, Concertina has made grants to a wide range of charitable organisations nationwide in England and Wales. These include funds to many care homes for the elderly to provide musical entertainment for their residents. http://www.concertinamusic.org.uk/Grants.php

Lloyds Bank Foundation Launches Two New Funding Programmes 
The Lloyds Bank Foundation for England & Wales has announced the launch of two new grants programmes to replace its flagship "Communities Programme". The aim is to support projects that help people over the age of 17 who are experiencing multiple disadvantage at one of the critical points in their life. The funding programmes are "Invest" which is a flexible, long term core funding programme for charities helping disadvantaged people. Grants are up to £25,000 per year for two or three years, with the opportunity for continuation funding for up to six years in total. "Enable" which is a smaller and shorter grants programme for charities that have identified clear development needs. This funding aims to help the organisations deliver their mission more effectively. These grants are up to a total £15,000 over two years. The funding is available to registered charities and charitable incorporated organisations (CIOs) with an income of between £25,000 and £1 million. To be eligible, organisations are expected to be working with people 17 years or older, experiencing multiple disadvantage at one of the critical points in their life. The only exceptions are young people who are under 17 years of age and young parents or looked after children and disabled young people moving into independent living.

There are no closing dates and applications can be submitted at any time. Read more by clicking on the twins below.




DIE in the Past
Live in the Future.


THE velocity of velocities arrives in starting.



IN pressing the material to derive its essence, matter becomes deformed.

AND form hurtling against itself is thrown beyond the synopsis of vision.

THE straight line and the circle are the parents of design, form the basis of art; there is no limit to their coherent variability.

LOVE the hideous in order to find the sublime core of it.

OPEN your arms to the dilapidated; rehabilitate them.

YOU prefer to observe the past on which your eyes are already opened.

BUT the Future is only dark from outside.

Leap into it—and it EXPLODES with Light.

FORGET that you live in houses, that you may live in yourself—

FOR the smallest people live in the greatest houses.

BUT the smallest person, potentially, is as great as the Universe.

WHAT can you know of expansion, who limit yourselves to compromise?

HITHERTO the great man has achieved greatness by keeping the people small.

BUT in the Future, by inspiring the people to expand to their fullest capacity, the great man proportionately must be tremendous—a God.

LOVE of others is the appreciation of oneself.

MAY your egotism be so gigantic that you comprise mankind in your self-sympathy.

THE Future is limitless—the past a trail of insidious reactions.

LIFE is only limited by our prejudices. Destroy them, and you cease to be at the mercy of yourself.

TIME is the dispersion of intensiveness.

THE Futurist can live a thousand years in one poem.

HE can compress every aesthetic principle in one line.

THE mind is a magician bound by assimilations; let him loose and the smallest idea conceived in freedom will suffice to negate the wisdom of all forefathers.

LOOKING on the past you arrive at “Yes,” but before you can act upon it you have already arrived at “No.”

THE Futurist must leap from affirmative to affirmative, ignoring intermittent negations—must spring from stepping-stone to stone of creative exploration; without slipping back into the turbid stream of accepted facts.

THERE are no excrescences on the absolute, to which man may pin his faith.

TODAY is the crisis in consciousness.

CONSCIOUSNESS cannot spontaneously accept or reject new forms, as offered by creative genius; it is the new form, for however great a period of time it may remain a mere irritant—that molds consciousness to the necessary amplitude for holding it.

CONSCIOUSNESS has no climax.

Mina Loy, "Aphorisms on Futurism" from The Last Lunar Baedeker, published by Jargon Press. Copyright © 1982 by Mina Loy. Reprinted by permission of The Estate of Mina Loy.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Small notes from a field in England

Randomised Thoughts, Controlled Ramblings and a few Trialised Thoughts 
On 22nd May between 4:00pm - 6:30pm the North West Arts and Health Network will be hosting a special event with Mike White from the Centre for Medical Humanities. Author of Arts Development in Community Health: A Social Tonic which is just about the only arts/health book I recommend, (alongside The Spirit Level) and some blistering blog postings including the recent Directions and Misdirections in Arts in HealthMike will be giving a presentation on all things arts/health and having a conversation with all of us attending. This is a rare opportunity to meet and discuss arts, health and community development with arguably the leading light in the field. Register for the free event at artsforhealth@aol.com and confirmation and venue details will be emailed to you on Tuesday 20th May.


Thank you for the lovely email after last weeks blog. It makes it all worthwhile. I’m getting to grips with the annual exhibition that Arts for Health co-curates with colleagues at the Holden Gallery. It’s true to say Urban Psychosis is getting under my skin. You’ll know that Will Self will be speaking here in July and this week, I went out to Piccadilly Records and bought Damon Albarn’s new album, Everyday Robots - and you could knock me down with a feather! - the whole thing is pure Urban Psychosis...or at least, Damon’s own psycho-geography.If you have access to DA please ask if he’d be interested in giving us an acoustic set in late July? We will be showing, amongst others, the work of Eija Liisa Ahtila, Matthew Buckingham, Sophie Calle, Luke Fowler and Gillian Wearing and are planning some very special events! Keep your eyes on this blog for more details.


So this week, I’ve been digesting further inequalities (sorry if it bores some of you) and Arts Professional highlight that poor areas are suffering the highest local authority arts cuts. Here’s some info from their website.

The most deprived of England’s local authority areas have faced an average funding cut of 18%, which has translated to a cut to arts, libraries and heritage of 22%, according to Shadow Minister for Culture Helen Goodman MP. The second poorest quartile of councils, which have faced an average resource loss of 10%, have so far implemented a 19% cut for culture. In an attempt to quantify the impact of local authority cuts on the arts, Goodman submitted Freedom of Information requests to every local authority in England. She also found that 50% of Councils in the least deprived areas had seen an overall spending cut of 6%, including a 7% loss to culture. Speaking at the Prospect Seminar ‘Heritage in a Cold Climate’, she said: “The Department for Culture, Media and Sport have totally failed to persuade Eric Pickles of the case for culture and the arts. So, funding is dwindling across the country, as local authorities seek to protect statutory services. Just as the overall local authority cuts have hit the most deprived areas hardest, cuts to culture and arts are afflicting those who can least afford it.”



Now I pack for a week in Italy where I’ll be facilitating some RECOVERIST MANIFESTO events. What, you didn’t know about Recoverism? It’s a movement, just like Impressionism (but less chocolate-box insipid), or Futurism (but with less of the UKIP flavour), or Craftivism (but...wait on a minute...its very like Craftivism). OK, we’re upping the ante and building on the US Recovery Bill of Rights, which states:  “Our nation’s response to the crisis of addiction should be based on the engagement and involvement of the recovery community – people in recovery, their families, friends and allies – and on sound public health science. Policies and programs must close the gap between science and policy. By speaking out and putting a human face on recovery, people in or seeking recovery and their families play a critical role in breaking down barriers. These personal “faces and voices of recovery” serve powerfully to educate the public about addiction and recovery and about discrimination against those seeking sustained recovery.” Recoverism, as opposed to a bill of rights, is poetically putting people at the heart of their own stories. We’ll share on July 17th, but here's a taste - and don't worry if it doesn't make sense yet - it will all come together.

    I don’t know and it’s ok I don’t know...

Hey – who was it that said, ‘boys don’t cry’ – because they’re wrong. Boys do cry, girls cry – women and men cry too! 
    
Not sure who you are? 
      
Well, don’t you cry? We all do. FACT.

We are more than inconvenient statistics - pathological stereotypes - pedalled by the media. We are people in recovery
    We are lovers - children, parents, sisters, brothers - we are friends. 
         Imperfect everyday humans with lives beyond quick diagnoses and simple labels.

    ...it’s not profound, I just feel it, that’s all

USING MOBILE METHODS TO RESEARCH THE LIVES OF YOUNG MEN AT THE MEN’S ROOM MANCHESTER
Wednesday 21th May 2014 15:00 – 17:30
Last Friday, I had the great pleasure to attend the very stimulating AHRC funded, Public Arts Now: Thinking Beyond Measurement workshop, facilitated by UCLAN’s Prof Lynn Froggett and Dr Ali Roy with able support by SITUATIONS Michael Prior. They offered a deeper and more nuanced understanding of cultural value in the context of art in the public realm. Lovely to meet new and exciting people too. Ali Roy will be sharing more of his work that’s been developed with the Men’s Room. 

Walking as a research method has been adopted in anthropology and ethnography, cultural geography and qualitative social science as an innovative way to produce knowledge. This body of work is based on the oft-cited notion of the co-ingredience of people and place, the idea that identities, experiences and behaviours are embedded in the places a person inhabits. This seminar presents findings from a research project conducted with the Men’s Room, Manchester, an arts and social care agency which works creatively with young men involved with sex work or with experience of sexual exploitation and those with experience of homelessness and/or the criminal justice system. In the project seven ‘walking tours’ were conducted with the young men as part of the research. Young men were invited to lead a researcher and a Men’s Room staff member on a walking tour of city centre sites they associated with their survival. On arrival at each stop, we asked them to take a photograph and, if they were happy to, tell a story about the site. The seminar concludes by arguing that there is a need to better understand the trajectories of movement experienced by young men facing severe and multiple disadvantage in order to provide appropriate support. More details and registration by clicking on the walkers below.



From our own (Arts and Health) correspondent….
Singer, Victoria Hume worked for many years on the London Arts and Health Forum and at the Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust. She moved to South Africa recently and is posting some excellent blogs, of which the extract below is taken. Click on the picture below to link to her blog.

"...the notion of social responsibility in the arts is – I would contest – more embedded here (in South Africa) than in the UK. {…} South Africa lacks the embarrassment we have had to contend with for years in the UK around engaged practice. This is at last changing in the UK, thanks in part to artists like Grayson Perry who engage with the politics both of their practice and of the society around them." 



Grants to Help New, Innovative Visual Arts Projects 
The Elephant Trust has announced that the next deadline for applications is the 7th July 2014. The Trust offers grants to artists and for new, innovative visual arts projects based in the UK. The Trust's aim is to make it possible for artists and those presenting their work to undertake and complete projects when confronted by lack of funds. The Trust supports projects that develop and improve the knowledge, understanding and appreciation of the fine arts. Priority is now being given to artists and small organisations and galleries who should submit well argued, imaginative proposals for making or producing new work or exhibitions. Arts Festivals are not supported. The Trust normally awards grants of up to £2,000, but larger grants may be considered. Read more at http://elephanttrust.org.uk/docs/intro.html

Carnegie Challenge 
The Carnegie UK Trust has announced that it is offering up to ten not-for-profit organisations from the UK and Ireland the opportunity to win grants worth £3,000 to hold inspiring debates on how to improve people’s wellbeing. The Carnegie UK Trust has been arguing that focusing on delivering economic growth as the sole indicator of social prosperity is flawed. Instead, the Trust believes the time is right for the UK and Ireland to shift its emphasis from economic production to improving people’s lives more broadly.  The Carnegie Challenge aims to support events around the UK and Ireland that will deepen understanding of what influences individual and societal wellbeing; explore how best to measure wellbeing and how this can be used to shape policy and practice; or examine what practical steps can be taken by third sector organisations and governments to improve wellbeing.There will be three funding rounds in 2014 and the next closing date for applications is the 14th July 2014. Read more at:http://www.carnegieuktrust.org.uk/changing-minds/carnegie-challenge


Advanced notice of the 6th Annual International Arts, Health & Wellbeing Conference in Melbourne between 11 - 13 November this year. 
Click on the image above for details.

Call for Entries!
Northern Artist Film Programme
Deadline 6 June
We are looking for artists and filmmakers in the North of England who are pushing the boundaries in artist film. We want to showcase a range of new, inspirational and challenging film art from emerging northern talent. We want excellent work that captures the imagination of the public, many of whom would be new to artist film. For more information, click on the still from the sublime (but oh so distrurbing), A Field in England by Ben Wheatley.



Untold Stories in Health and Illness
Saturday 17th May Manchester
Click on the dear little tiger for more information


Monday, May 5, 2014

...inequalities, abuse, virtual love affairs and more

...a week of heightened moments of the here and now* with added miserablist awareness of inequalities, all punctuated by a 21st Century love affair! Good grief...let’s start with the miserable eh.

As the BBC’s Panorama yet again exposed neglect and abuse in care services for elderly people and we all scrabble around looking for someone to blame, sack or make a scape-goat of, I can’t help wondering why we don’t just stop and ask why people abuse their power like this? Perhaps the answer is borne of the simple fact, that the people who are doling out the abuse, seem to have no power, or rather the only power they do have, is direct power over those worse off than themselves - the elderly, infirm and least able. Time and again it appears that the people with the least/fewest resources (emotional, educational and economic) take on the work that no one else wants to do, the poorly paid, the under stimulated and the ‘services’ we routinely hide-away. Spoon-feeding, shaving and mopping up all manner of bodily fluids. 


For those of us who traipse into care homes with our cultural interventions and who evangelise about the arts from our comfortable transient roles ‘transforming’ peoples lives as we go, it’s easy to forget the over-worked care assistant, who dosen’t want to take part in our cultural activity. The grim reality of care is that no one cares about the carers (or perhaps we do when it’s our own relative, but not when its one of a million anonymous others).

I’ve had a couple of stints as a nursing assistant in an old fashioned hospital for people with learning difficulties and in a smaller care home where, I toileted and brushed the teeth of adults. In the hospital, it was like a production line of ‘care’ and in the smaller home, at least the ratio of care was appropriate. But in both cases, I witnessed what I would describe as institutionalised behaviour and appalling attitudes to fellow humans, (I knew people who cared deeply too).


But bloody hell, the job is so demanding - exhausting - and emotionally draining and in both cases for me, I saw the job as a necessity, in between jobs - it certainly wasn’t my vocation. Yet again this reminds me of our unequal society and how, from positions of comfort and relative power, we can point at the ‘underclasses’ who we throw a few pennies to and ask to look after our feeble and aged relatives and then kick up a stink when it all goes wrong.

Surely we should understand inequalities by now. We’ve had Marmot illustrating them these last few years and we had Sir Douglas Black telling us a similar story in the early 1980’s. Come to think of it those early public health pioneers did something similar over 100 years ago and Dickens did a reasonable job of painting a picture of unequal societies, so by now, we should have a pretty good idea how economic, domestic and educational circumstances perpetuate inequalities.

As Kate Picket and Danny Dorling so eloquently suggest in Against the organisation of misery? The Marmot Review of health inequalities, we know all this, but we don’t have the political will to act.

“No reviews or policies ‘boldly go’ where all public health researchers know they need to go. And yet our evidence base for the social determinants of health proceeds apace; we learn more and more about the futility of trying to change individual behaviour, and more and more about the importance of influences in the womb and early years of childhood. Indeed, the Marmot Review could have gone much further, if it had only placed greater reliance on Sir Michael Marmot’s own research and that of his colleagues studying life-course effects on health in the British birth cohorts. In contrast to 1980 when the Black Report was published, we now, thanks especially to his work, know much more about the importance of psychosocial influences on population health. We also know much more about the biology of chronic stress (Sapolsky, 2005), about how rank and status harm health (Marmot, 2004). We know that children get the best start in life by being brought up in more equitable societies, rather than in rich ones (Pickett & Wilkinson, 2007). Why did the Marmot Review not make hard-hitting recommendations to reduce the harm created by great differences in rank and status? 



Whilst our ‘for profit’ care homes continue to be driven by the market value of each of its fragile ‘commodoties’, it will take a significant political shift to start valuing not only the oldest and most vulnerable people, but those who care for them too. With the average wage for care assistants being just over £7 per hour and only basic training on offer, care homes are competing with supermarkets for staff.

We are unequal at both ends of our life course - topped and tailed - so to speak. Only this week the report Why Children Die using data from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation reveals that children under five in the UK are more likely to die than in any other western European country except Malta. The report in The Lancet exposes one specific factor: deaths rise with socio-economic deprivation. We should be appalled.

Again, Picket and Dorling stress that much of the focus on inequalities is wrapped up in the language of “...economics, not social epidemiology or progressive public health. It is a language that has seeped into our everyday vocabulary and thinking…”

Of course I’m a great advocate for making all care-environments more creative, stimulating and culturally vibrant spaces - but let’s get real - we are skimming the surface of the water, and as Picket and Dorling conclude: 

“What is missing is the political courage to deal with the root causes of those social determinants. Why people smoke, rather than trying to get them to stop, why people eat too much, commit violence, trust each other less, invest more money in their children’s education, rather than trying to understand the social inequalities that stand in their way.”


Hilary Moss and Desmond O’Neill contribute an excellent paper to The Lancet called, Aesthetic deprivation in clinical settings. Here’s a paragraph to whet your appetite, and click on the bottle of Buxton Water above for the full article.

“...many clinicians, including those favourably disposed to a greater presence of arts in health care, remain uncomfortable with the often fulsome language and somewhat uncritical stance of evangelists of the arts and health movement. Phrases such as the “healing arts” seem to overstate potential benefits and contain uneasy echoes of obscurantism and mysticism. Indeed, many of us may associate the golden age of art in hospitals with the worst forms of speculative and unscientific treatment—the four humours, purging, and blood-letting.”


HA...and so to a 21st Century love affair. French newspaper Le Monde has startled its readers by serialising a graphic novel about an online love affair on its website. The novel illustrates virtual love in an Internet age where two people become friends through the internet communications site, Skype. They start to have remote sex without meeting. La Technique du perinea is by Florent Ruppert and Jérôme Mulot and coloured by Isabelle Merlet. Click on the image above to go to the story. Fancy yourself as a graphic short story writer? Read on...

Graphic Short Story Prize
Want to apply for the Cape/Observer/Comica Graphic Short Story Prize 2014? Click on the audience below for more details...


New Science & Society Community Challenge Grant Scheme 
The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) has announced a new £500,000 grants scheme to support to create and run pilot projects that take science to diverse audiences. There will be 3 levels of project funding: up to £10,000, up to £20,000 and up to £40,000, depending on the size and difficulty of the project. The scheme is open to a wide range of people, including:
  • Scientists and researchers
  • Science centre or museum staff
  • Educators, schools, colleges and universities
  • Film makers
  • Theatre producers
  • Games developers
It is expecting to fund between 20 and 25 projects in the 2014/15 financial year. The deadline for applications is 16th May 2014. Read more at https://www.gov.uk/science-and-society-community-challenge-grant-scheme



The Peter Cruddas Foundation 
The Peter Cruddas Foundation is a grant making Foundation that aims to support charitable works that benefit disadvantaged and disengaged young people in the UK by ensuring that their funding reaches those most in need. Priorities for funding are:
Pathways/support for young disadvantaged or disengaged people in the age range 14 to 30 into education, training or employment
Work experience/skills projects for young people aged 16 to 30
Youth work in London particularly evening work for disadvantaged young people aged 16 to 30.
To be eligible for funding an organisation must be a registered charity or an organisation / individual supported by a UK charity. There are no minimum or maximum grants and projects can be funded for more than one year. The closing date for application is the 1st September 2014.  Read more at:http://thepetercruddasfoundation.org/how_to_apply.htm

Fancy working in Stockholm as an artist in residence? Click on the ice-cream eating nuns to find out more.


*Working from home, and seeing the sun come out, I had the opportunity to have my lunch in a graveyard - so took it (broad beans in the pod, lump of cheese and bread, an apple and a drink). A small church by the estuary as the tide was pouring in. The sun, shining through broken clouds after a week of rain. The sky full of flying things - mayfly, newly liberated from their nymph stage for a couple of days at the most, in search of insect intimacy - and midges by the tens of thousands. Sitting on a bench, dedicated to two long-dead lovers. In the newly mown grass, lay a freshly dead thrush, quite relaxed and oblivious to the fussing of the flies. Behind me, on a rise, a tiny old church, its ornately carved Norman doorway honey coloured in the sunlight. Daffodils who had lost their heads, but roses who were expectant with something altogether pinker and more secret. Two beautiful butterflies* dancing on unseen thermals laced with perfume-like pheromones. A thousand daisies crowded-out by a million bluebells and wild garlic that filled the air with something heady. The buzzing of the flies, the songs of unknown birds and an awareness of myself in the lattice-work of fields, imbued a deep sense of the here and now. Something quite delicious took over me. An intoxicating gravity. A gentle breeze as we turn through space, my feet heavy on the earth. A certain death below, before and after me. All these transient things. Having never meditated, I guessed that this was something like that, only instead of emptying my mind, it was focused down to this overwhelming nowness and some relaxed acceptance of things beyond myself. It’ll be alright, you are ok, everything will be fine.

*Female butterflies release perfume-like pheromones into the air. The male butterflies of many species can detect the pheromones from as far away as 2 kilometres. Some species of moths are sensitive to the presence of the females' pheromones up to five kilometres away.