Anne Brodie Dead Mother |
Dead Mother
2014 video still 3'45 minutes 16:9 |
20 June - 6 July 2014 |
Dead Mother is about living. It attempts to make visible a hidden absence. It is about women who are successfully living their lives, invisibly accommodating the continuing space of their mother’s death at a crucial period of their neurological development. No one asks about the nature of the absence and the effect it has. It remains hidden to all but those closest. What exactly is the space? '15 years ago, it was widely assumed that the
vast majority of brain development takes place in the first few years
of life. Back then we didn’t have the ability to look inside the living
human brain and track development across the lifespan' Engaging with Neuro-scientist Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, Neuro-psychologist Professor Martin Conway, Psychoanalyst Dr Michael Parsons, ethics advice from Professor Roger Higgs, and discussions with Writer and Researcher Dr Caterina Albano, Artist Anne Brodie and her sister G.P Dr Catriona Brodie, have looked at the nature of the long-term effects of a mother’s death in adolescence. A series of film and photographic outcomes have been created based upon interviews with women at different stages in their lives who have a shared experience of their own mother’s death when they were aged 14 and 17 respectively. |
Anne Brodie
is a visual artist with a cross disciplinary approach to her work. After
a first degree in Biology, she completed an MA at the Royal College
of Art in 2003. Working experimentally with hot glass, film and photography,
she jointly won the international Bombay Sapphire prize for design and
innovation with her short film Roker Breakfast in 2005.
Dead Mother was produced by Elizabeth Newell and will tour to the Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival, Autumn 2014. The artist received Research and Development funding from the Wellcome Trust and Arts Council England funding for Production in 2014. |
'Something that
goes with me' 2014 video still 12'22 minutes
16:9 HD |
The Mark
2014 video still 3'45 minutes 16:9 |
Installation view The Mark
2014 video 3'45 minutes 16:9 |
Installation view The Mark
2014 video 3'45 minutes 16:9 |
Installation view The Conversation
2014 4 screens installation 3'38 minutes 16:9
HD |
Installation view 'Something that goes with me'
2014 video 12'22 minutes 16:9 HD |
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