Venue
The Tavistock Institute of Human Relations
Date
Wednesday, November 16, 2022
05:00 PM
Address
3rd floor, 63 Gee Street London EC1V 3RS
Location
London
Organiser
The Tavistock Institute of Human Relations

A year after we opened our first exhibition, we are now back with another annual project, an exhibition devoted to the practices of Social Dreaming. A range of art works in Social Dreams, Social Matters: Artistic Affluence in Social Dreaming critically explores the generative and performative nature of dreaming. Connecting the richness of artistic responses with theory and practice of Social Dreaming – a radical exercise in sharing, associating to and working with dreams – this exhibition is not to be missed.

Come to the opening to speak to artists, researchers, academics, Social Dreaming practitioners, and Group Relations consultants. Come to think and enquire about the power of dreams and their potential to change how we think about ourselves and the wider world.

During the pandemic, The Tavistock Institute of Human Relations held weekly online Social Dreaming matrices. Why were they so popular and what did they offer to those that came to them? Join us to find out and to experience the meaning of Social Dreaming yourself… What is the societal unconscious trying to tell us? Listen, see, feel, and sense… Think, envision, imagine, free-associate…

The event is open to all. If you would like to see the exhibition but can’t make the Opening, get in touch at [email protected] to see the artwork another time. We look forward to dreaming with you!

Artist bios:

Bongsu Park is a London-based, multidisciplinary Korean artist and long-term collaborator with the Tavistock Institute. Her recent work is founded on how our innermost thoughts may connect with other people’s and how these can then be shared publicly through dreams. She has exhibited internationally including at Zona Maco Arte Contemporáneo, México, FIAC, France, and The Moving Image Istanbul, Turkey. Her performance work was shown at Camden Arts Centre, Gallery Rosenfeld, and The Coronet Theatre in London.

Marie Beauchamps is an Amsterdam-based poet, creative entrepreneur, and an academic working across humanities, social sciences, and law. She has published extensively on affective politics, national identity, and the politics of movement, now engaging with questions of pedagogy and knowledge-writing practices in their relation to knowledge production. She is an Associate Researcher at the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis, and one of the pioneering practitioners of the Deepening Creative Practice programme.

Juliet Scott is a visual artist with an interest in still life and object relations, and a social scientist interweaving between these disciplines through her studio research. She oversees organisational curation projects and the creation of dynamic learning environments including as programme director of Deepening Creative Practice with Organisations at The Tavistock Institute of Human Relations.