Arts Publications

The Embodied Mind

Ed. Siân Ede
March 2009

Free PDF of the Report (15.8 MB) 32 pp
(March 2009)

Report of the symposium held at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, 12th December 2008.

'A lot of neuroscientific discovery has been made through observing people with brain dysfunction, in order better to comprehend the workings of the ‘normal’ brain. By contrast, dance and theatre practitioners possess a superfunction, training themselves to observe their own processes, attaining often astonishing feats of ‘body memory’, spatial awareness and unspoken physical communication with each other and with audiences, and turning this into a new composition, a work of art. Clinicians are sometimes amazed by the brain/body’s determination to cope with injury or illness, its flexibility and plasticity, and an insight into this could inspire dance and theatre artists not just to understand and challenge their own practice but to create new artworks that communicate differently. It would be fascinating for both sides to learn more about the ideas of the other...'
Siân Ede, Deputy Director, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation


Forthcoming and Recent

Search Publications

Dark Matter: Poems of space
Poems of space

Signs and Humours
The poetry of medicine

The Turning World
Stories from the London International Festival of Theatre

Wild Reckoning
An anthology provoked by Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring

Science, not Art
Ten scientists’ diaries

Art, not Chance
Nine artists’ diaries

Strange and Charmed
Science and the contemporary visual arts