Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration

This paper presents the Mind the Gut exhibition, opened in 2017 at the Medical Museion, the University of Copenhagen's museum for the culture and history of medicine. It is an experimental exhibition combining science, art, and history in an examination of the relationship between mind and gut,...

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Main Authors: Adam Bencard, Louise Emma Whiteley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-11-01
Series:Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16512235.2018.1555433
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spelling doaj-7100a5e31cc140df9443a86d0156ce2a2020-11-25T02:11:52ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMicrobial Ecology in Health and Disease1651-22352018-11-0129210.1080/16512235.2018.15554331555433Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaborationAdam Bencard0Louise Emma Whiteley1University of CopenhagenUniversity of CopenhagenThis paper presents the Mind the Gut exhibition, opened in 2017 at the Medical Museion, the University of Copenhagen's museum for the culture and history of medicine. It is an experimental exhibition combining science, art, and history in an examination of the relationship between mind and gut, including the trillions of microbes that inhabits them. Mind the Gut was the result of a 2-year-long research and curatorial process, which began in 2015 when Museion was awarded the Bikuben Foundation Vision Award. The exhibition brings together the long history of attempts to understand and intervene in the relationship between mind and gut, between emotions and digestion with cutting-edge biomedical research, and includes the perspectives of science, medicine, and personal experience, via a combination of artworks, historical objects from the Medical Museion collections, items from laboratories, and individual stories. The exhibition is organized around different ways the body has been handled in order to intervene in interactions between mind, gut, and bacteria, including imaging, electrifying, feeding, drugging, and opening surgically. This paper outlines some of the thoughts on science communication that motivated the exhibition, discussing why the displays emphasize the exploratory over the explanatory. Also discussed are several artistic collaborations that formed part of the displays. Ultimately, Mind the Gut is created to be a public space that encourages reflection and curiosity, by showing how biomedicine fits into social, cultural, historical, and directly personal contexts. The exhibition does not aim to provide answers about what food the visitors should eat or what the truth of how gut and brain interactions might be. Rather, it emphasizes process over result, hopefully encouraging the visitors to ask their own questions of the relationship between mind and gut, between body and microbes.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16512235.2018.1555433Exhibitionsscience communicationmedical humanitieshistory and philosophyart and science
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam Bencard
Louise Emma Whiteley
spellingShingle Adam Bencard
Louise Emma Whiteley
Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease
Exhibitions
science communication
medical humanities
history and philosophy
art and science
author_facet Adam Bencard
Louise Emma Whiteley
author_sort Adam Bencard
title Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
title_short Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
title_full Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
title_fullStr Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Mind the Gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
title_sort mind the gut—displaying microbiome research through artistic collaboration
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease
issn 1651-2235
publishDate 2018-11-01
description This paper presents the Mind the Gut exhibition, opened in 2017 at the Medical Museion, the University of Copenhagen's museum for the culture and history of medicine. It is an experimental exhibition combining science, art, and history in an examination of the relationship between mind and gut, including the trillions of microbes that inhabits them. Mind the Gut was the result of a 2-year-long research and curatorial process, which began in 2015 when Museion was awarded the Bikuben Foundation Vision Award. The exhibition brings together the long history of attempts to understand and intervene in the relationship between mind and gut, between emotions and digestion with cutting-edge biomedical research, and includes the perspectives of science, medicine, and personal experience, via a combination of artworks, historical objects from the Medical Museion collections, items from laboratories, and individual stories. The exhibition is organized around different ways the body has been handled in order to intervene in interactions between mind, gut, and bacteria, including imaging, electrifying, feeding, drugging, and opening surgically. This paper outlines some of the thoughts on science communication that motivated the exhibition, discussing why the displays emphasize the exploratory over the explanatory. Also discussed are several artistic collaborations that formed part of the displays. Ultimately, Mind the Gut is created to be a public space that encourages reflection and curiosity, by showing how biomedicine fits into social, cultural, historical, and directly personal contexts. The exhibition does not aim to provide answers about what food the visitors should eat or what the truth of how gut and brain interactions might be. Rather, it emphasizes process over result, hopefully encouraging the visitors to ask their own questions of the relationship between mind and gut, between body and microbes.
topic Exhibitions
science communication
medical humanities
history and philosophy
art and science
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16512235.2018.1555433
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