News

Art Works in Mental Health

Posted: 22 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


Until 16 May at Waterhall Gallery of Modern Art, Birmingham; 12 June-10 July at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh; 2-28 August at Urbis, Manchester.

Built in 1879 to house the Birmingham Corporation water department, the Waterhall is letting people with first or secondhand experience of mental health problems wash their artistic laundry in public, writes Graham Hopkins.

Showcasing paintings, drawings, photographs, mosaics, poetry and sculptures could be viewed sympathetically because of the artists' experiences or as a means of deconstructing associated stigma. But does it cut it as art?
Article continues below the advertisement



The exhibition is powerful, but is a curate's egg: excellent only in parts. Some exhibits would struggle to compete with my local comprehensive's art class. Others have the technical nous (Yvonne Mitton's "Polish Chicken", for example) to match the message.

Abstract art features heavily, although Claudia Bose's "Nightshift" and Faye Phinister's oil and thread on canvas "Grounded: Lost Songs" are particularly fine. It was good to see humour amid the torment: Deb Foster's "Only Smarties Have the Answer" uses Smartie-style letters to spell out "Prozac".

The essence of this exhibition, however, is captured by the evocative "In Darkness" by Michelle K Murray, who explains: "Art has the potential to touch us when we feel we are beyond reach." Art can be a light in the darkness - and this exhibition flickers well enough.


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!




Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts