Latest News
Creative Wellbeing Project
Creative Wellbeing was an online project delivered through the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, supported by the City Bridge Trust. This new strand of opportunities enabled us to deliver some projects differently using digital tools and online, whilst our building was inaccessible.
Freedom to Be
Freedom to Be was a creative project funded by the National Lottery Community Fund. During the pandemic we were able to redirect funding to deliver a creative project for patients from the James Wigg Practice and Queens Crescent Practice who were shielding over the summer of 2020. The work is on show at Queens Crescent practice and Kentish Town Health Centre
Spring has sprung!
Whilst we continue to wait until it’s safe to welcome back our community groups into Kentish Town Health Centre, we’re seeing signs of spring and change in our very own wellbeing garden.
Drawn Together
Drawn Together is a creative community for adults using arts practices to support connection, explore ways of seeing, sensing and experiencing ourselves and one another, and deepening our curiosity.
Unseen
Suzie Larke is a visual artist and photographer from Cardiff. Her project uses conceptual photography to depict the mental health experiences experiences of a group of participants. She uses constructed imagery, digitally stitching photographs together in such a way that they present as a single, untampered image.
Life on a Spectrum
Life on a Spectrum was a virtual exhibition. The exhibition was part of our Creative Wellbeing commissions featuring the work of Mahlia Amatina. The exhibition explores Autism through collaborative painting and video works.
On a scale from 1 to 10
On a scale from 1 to 10 was a virtual exhibition. The exhibition was part of our Creative Wellbeing commissions featuring the work of Liliana Zaharia. On a scale from 1 to 10 explores how it feels living with chronic pain through photography.
Mindful Transformations
Our first virtual exhibition as a part of our Creative Wellbeing commissions featured the work of Hisba Brimah. Hisba’s exhibition Mindful Transformations shares Hisba’s colourful geometric paintings plastered on the walls of our virtual gallery space.
Creative Wellbeing Artist Commissions
Over the next three months the Free Space Project will be working alongside a number of artists to create virtual exhibitions for all to explore.
Our Wellbeing Garden
With huge commitment from our fabulous garden volunteer Ian, our garden is looking lovely. It’s been a lot of hard work and we had hope we would all be able to enjoy the benefits this summer. That may not happen, but luckily we can share these photos so you can enjoy some of the benefits from home.
Freedom to Express
Freedom to Express was a 7 week visual arts project for SEND children between the ages of 10 and 15 and their siblings. During the sessions participants spent their time exploring what freedom means to them using a variety of different artistic techniques.
Everyday Delight
We have teamed up with Shutter Hub to bring you EVERYDAY DELIGHT, an exhibition all about looking for the joy in the small things, finding the magic in what might at first appear mundane, and discovering the beauty in the everyday.
Every Body is an Archive
Liz Orton’s project Every Body is an Archive explores the bounds of medical imaging data, entangling the biological, digital and social body. In mis/using professional radiology software, Orton’s work makes visible the spaces and limits of medical data reconstruction.
Freedom to Make
Freedom to Make was a creative project funded by the National Lottery Community Fund. This project was an 8-week knitting and textiles project run by artists Alejandra Picco and Beth Hopkins.
A Constant Companion
In this solo exhibition Zara shares works from both past and present projects exploring pain. From the ritual of taking medication in The Painkiller Prints to visualising both physical and psychological trauma with her on-going series Distress.
NWLive Concerts
During 2019 we partnered with local charity NW live to co-create a number of classical music concerts in the atrium of our Health Centre.
In the Mind
In the Mind is an illustration exhibition exploring mental health by artists Elsbeth van der Poel and Kathryn Watson. Through their unique drawing styles each artist has created a fantastical world of monsters, friends, worries and hope based on their own lived experience.
When Swallows Return
When Swallows Return is a powerful exhibition of sculptures, collages and prints that provide visual insight into some of the effects of stroke, and which reference and validate stroke survivors’ own experiences.
I Want to Live
I Want to Live is a project run by photographer Daniel Regan and suicide respite centre Maytree. The project comprises a number of interviews and photographic portraits of Maytree’s volunteer workforce, investigating what brings people to volunteer with those in suicidal crisis, volunteers’ own mental health experiences and the impact of suicide.