Unlike other cultural forms, museums have escaped sustained attention from perspectives that call upon psychoanalysis. This essay uses psychoanalytic concepts to explore the psychodynamics of museums today, focusing on health and well-being projects run in museums in Manchester, U.K. Evoking the idea of the museum as an asylum, the essay argues that museums, like asylums, are places of loss and melancholia and calls upon object relations theories, including those of D.W. Winnicott and Christopher Bollas, to explore this idea. Museums' commitment to preservation and longevity is juxtaposed to the knowledge of mortality and the inward desire to break up objects. The essay argues that museums have the potential to contain, in all its meanings,...
Museums are safe spaces for the objects they hold and for the persons that visit them, providing env...
An emerging body of evidence indicates that museum object handling sessions offer short term benefit...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
This article theorises museum engagement from a psychosocial perspective. With the aid of selected c...
This article theorises museum engagement from a psychosocial perspective. With the aid of selected c...
Two hundred years ago the Bethlem Asylum of London, also known as Bedlam, is reported to have ‘welco...
This article, in a special issue of 'Pyschoanalysis, Culture & Society' on 'Trauma and repair in the...
Museum based learning and cultural (un)consciousness What do we keep stuff for? In particular wha...
Despite its considerable investment in questions of memory, attachments between subjects and objects...
While much has been written on the history of psychiatry, remarkably little has been written about p...
This essay explores the relationship between aesthetics and psychology through the idea of the museu...
© 2017 GAPS. In this essay for the Journal of Social Work Practice I bring the practices of writing,...
The participatory turn in museum curation offers a powerful model for person-centred clinical care. ...
In this article, the author considers the extent to which site-responsive contemporary art can impac...
To coincide with emerging arts and health practices, University College London Museums & Collections...
Museums are safe spaces for the objects they hold and for the persons that visit them, providing env...
An emerging body of evidence indicates that museum object handling sessions offer short term benefit...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
This article theorises museum engagement from a psychosocial perspective. With the aid of selected c...
This article theorises museum engagement from a psychosocial perspective. With the aid of selected c...
Two hundred years ago the Bethlem Asylum of London, also known as Bedlam, is reported to have ‘welco...
This article, in a special issue of 'Pyschoanalysis, Culture & Society' on 'Trauma and repair in the...
Museum based learning and cultural (un)consciousness What do we keep stuff for? In particular wha...
Despite its considerable investment in questions of memory, attachments between subjects and objects...
While much has been written on the history of psychiatry, remarkably little has been written about p...
This essay explores the relationship between aesthetics and psychology through the idea of the museu...
© 2017 GAPS. In this essay for the Journal of Social Work Practice I bring the practices of writing,...
The participatory turn in museum curation offers a powerful model for person-centred clinical care. ...
In this article, the author considers the extent to which site-responsive contemporary art can impac...
To coincide with emerging arts and health practices, University College London Museums & Collections...
Museums are safe spaces for the objects they hold and for the persons that visit them, providing env...
An emerging body of evidence indicates that museum object handling sessions offer short term benefit...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...