Wednesday 25 May 2016

“Our Hospitals should be Galleries!”

Art Scope. The latest new gallery in Reading. High quality art. Beautiful gifts. Stunning sculptures. One thing though: it’s all under the roof of the clinical setting of a hospital…


That’s right, not your average destination for art, I know. But it’s surely one of the most powerful and impactful settings for art to be based, what with its ability to distract, interact and engage with the public? And then there’s the healing element of art and its ability to transcend traditional boundaries of communications.


The public atrium at the Circle hospital is the brainchild project of Rukshi Brownlow who put together the gallery at the initial building stages of the hospital. Believing in the fundamental ethos that ‘to create a beautiful space improves the experience for everyone’, she set about with this ambitious project to create an art gallery within a hospital, and has now set the ideal blue print for new Circle hospitals being built. She also states that ‘a recent study of art in 3 London hospitals showed that 9 out of 10 patients thought that the art made a difference to their experience, and 7 out of 10 patients were conscious that their anxiety levels were reduced as a direct result of the art’. A compelling fact.


One of the beauties of art in a hospital is that you have a captive audience. Patients are sat waiting for their appointments, and while doing so, they can attend to a piece of art – knowingly or not - and absorb themselves in a painting; something one may ordinarily not have the time to do. There’s also the relaxed beauty of no heaving crowds, people guarding the paintings, or that irritable wire that buzzes the second you come within a millimetre of a half metre away from the subject. The experience of art is a truly relaxing, beautiful and impactful one, and what I find really interesting is that the vast majority of patients have never visited a gallery before. So by bringing the art to the visitors, you’re being introducing to a whole new experience. Didn’t expect that from your hospital visit, did you?


There’s also something about the pure feeling of vulnerability in a hospital. It doesn’t matter who or what we are outside of a hospital; when we’re a patient, we’re dealing with an element of the unknown. We’re dependent on the views of Doctors and the outcome of tests and analysis: this isn’t our world and we don’t have the same control we harness and manifest in the rest of our lives. So the difference that art has to make in this setting is huge – and not just to the patients and visitors, but staff too.


The gallery has received ample positive feedback from visitors to the hospital and the scheme is being rolled out to select other Circle hospitals – that is the power, resolve and need for art in public spaces. And I am very lucky to have my art shown at the Reading Art Scope Gallery with my painting ‘Community Roots’. A seeming good fit with the hospital, as the painting explores the concept of laying down roots with the resources that we have, and growing a community of roots across our lifetime. Come take a look: these days, you needn’t be a patient to visit a hospital – everyone is very welcome :)


NOTE: The gallery is open Mon – Fri  from 8am to 6pm with free car parking and a café (with a Michelin star chef, no less!). Further details can be found on the website: http://www.artscopeatcircle.co.uk/

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