Approaching Unreason
Institutional psychotherapy is an experimental psychiatric practice that began to be developed in the mid-20th century, and which centres on the conviction that if we are to care for the sick, we must first care for the hospital 鈥 that, in other words, we must never isolate mental disorders from their social and institutional contexts. Taking inspiration from these revolutionary psychiatric and human practices that draw upon the collective and upon artistic creation, this exhibition explores different ways of transforming places of isolation into places of protection that can offer refuges from the violence of society.
It presents the films of Fran莽ois Pain, who documented life at the Clinique de la Borde and recorded the words of important practitioners of institutional psychotherapy, namely Fran莽ois Tosquelles, Jean Oury, and F茅lix Guattari. It also gathers the work of artists, carers and therapists who have developed forms of collective artistic practice in various different structures linked to mental healthcare including psychiatric hospitals, outpatient clinics, and special needs schools. These experiments, both past and present, in France and further afield, show how art can act as a catalyst for emancipation, for the expression of a vital poetry, and for an active and critical form of community-building.
Michel Fran莽ois, exhibition view of 芦 Engrais, orties et pissenlits 禄, Tecla Sala, Barcelone, 1997
This exhibition seeks to expand our understanding of the reasons for making art and the ways of making it, as well as of its social, political, psychic and ethical import; to allow us share in and collectively animate the motivations and the desire for self-expression of people for whom the 鈥榮imple鈥 and the 鈥榚veryday鈥 are anything but self-evident; to suggest how institutional psychotherapy, though it initially emerged in a psychiatric context, could be a tool, or at least a means of thinking and acting, applicable elsewhere, one which can help us to name, analyze and combat forms of systemic violence that cut across different institutions and areas of social life.
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Institutional psychotherapy is an experimental psychiatric practice that began to be developed in the mid-20th century, and which centres on the conviction that if we are to care for the sick, we must first care for the hospital 鈥 that, in other words, we must never isolate mental disorders from their social and institutional contexts. Taking inspiration from these revolutionary psychiatric and human practices that draw upon the collective and upon artistic creation, this exhibition explores different ways of transforming places of isolation into places of protection that can offer refuges from the violence of society.
It presents the films of Fran莽ois Pain, who documented life at the Clinique de la Borde and recorded the words of important practitioners of institutional psychotherapy, namely Fran莽ois Tosquelles, Jean Oury, and F茅lix Guattari. It also gathers the work of artists, carers and therapists who have developed forms of collective artistic practice in various different structures linked to mental healthcare including psychiatric hospitals, outpatient clinics, and special needs schools. These experiments, both past and present, in France and further afield, show how art can act as a catalyst for emancipation, for the expression of a vital poetry, and for an active and critical form of community-building.
Michel Fran莽ois, exhibition view of 芦 Engrais, orties et pissenlits 禄, Tecla Sala, Barcelone, 1997
This exhibition seeks to expand our understanding of the reasons for making art and the ways of making it, as well as of its social, political, psychic and ethical import; to allow us share in and collectively animate the motivations and the desire for self-expression of people for whom the 鈥榮imple鈥 and the 鈥榚veryday鈥 are anything but self-evident; to suggest how institutional psychotherapy, though it initially emerged in a psychiatric context, could be a tool, or at least a means of thinking and acting, applicable elsewhere, one which can help us to name, analyze and combat forms of systemic violence that cut across different institutions and areas of social life.
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