The Barbican has announced a new collaboration with the Wellcome Trust that will see it stage a season bringing together the arts and neuroscience.
The season, which promises “to light up the mind”, runs from March to April 2013 and will also feature a film season exploring neuroscience and mental health on the big
screen and a “theatrical 19th century Parisian Salon debating the big topics
of 21st century thought”.
Barbican managing director Nicholas Kenyon said: “The two cultures of art and science are so often perceived as remote from each other – in fact they interact on many levels, and this path-breaking collaboration with the Wellcome Trust will enable us to explore the riches of creativity and perception in a new way.”
Clare Matterson, the Wellcome Trust’s director of Medical Humanities and Engagement, added: “Scientists and artists have been examining the brain for centuries from different but often complementary viewpoints. Our exciting new venture with the Barbican will bring these two approaches together, delving into a fascinating, but potentially challenging, area of science and opening it up to the public.”
Spotlight on Duchamp
Also announced today is the Barbican’s full Theatre and Dance spring programme. It features
three productions which form part of Dancing around Duchamp, a major
cross-arts season centred on the artist Marcel Duchamp, bringing
together “key figures from visual arts, dance, theatre, music and film
who changed the face of 20th-century art”.
The programme includes Robert Wilson’s theatrical interpretation of John
Cage’s 1959 Lecture on Nothing, Cheek by Jowl’s new French production of
Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi (10-20 April), Barry McGovern’s adaptation
of Beckett’s novella Watt (26 February to 16 March) and the Théâtre de la Ville-Paris production
of Rhinoceros by Eugène Ionesco (14-16 February).
Further highlights of the
spring 2013 season include three productions as part of the London
International Mime Festival, Çia de Dança Deborah Colker’s Edinburgh International Festival show Tatyana, ENO presenting the world
premiere of Michel van der Aa’s Sunken Garden, and “cutting-edge new work”
as part of the SPILL Festival of Performance.