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This book presents a diverse collection of essays, artworks and personal testimony exploring connections between mental health and the social constructs, political conditions, and technologies that that structure our lives. It features contributions from a broad range of artists, researchers, clinicians and mental health activists.

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Produktbeschreibung
This book presents a diverse collection of essays, artworks and personal testimony exploring connections between mental health and the social constructs, political conditions, and technologies that that structure our lives. It features contributions from a broad range of artists, researchers, clinicians and mental health activists.
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Autorenporträt
Vanessa Bartlett is a researcher, writer and curator currently based between London, Liverpool and Sydney, Australia. She is a PhD candidate at University of New South Wales, where her research explores digital art as a way of prompting audiences to reflect on their own mental health in the gallery space. Vanessa's writing has featured in The Guardian and she has given lectures internationally in Belgrade, Ljubljana and Helsinki, as well as at prestigious UK venues like Tate Liverpool, The Arnolfini and The Science Museum, London. In the past she has worked as a researcher and producer for two of the UK's most exciting digital media festivals: FutureEverything, Manchester and Abandon Normal Devices (part of the programme at FACT, Liverpool). She has also curated a number of successful exhibitions, including Slowness at Red Wire Gallery, which was highlighted as a must see exhibition by Times critic Rachel Campbell-Johnston. Vanessa's research is motivated by her personal experience, which she first began to document April 2010 on a blog that was called Group Therapy. This blog explored the relationship between contemporary art, mental health and technology and laid the conceptual foundation for the Group Therapy exhibition. Vanessa is currently in the process of developing a project called What Can Art Do? that will serve as a platform for her ongoing work in art and mental health.