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The Art of Pain
Adelaide 20 – 30 July 2015
Exhibition Keynote Address: 6.00pm – 7.15pm Tuesday 21 July Panel discussions: 5.30pm – 8.00pm Wednesday 22 July |
Timed to coincide with National Pain Week, The Art of Pain discusses contemporary pain research and its implications. Presented by ANAT, The Bob Hawke Centre Prime Ministerial Centre and Pain Adelaide with the generous support of the Australia Council for the Arts, The Art of Pain comprises an exhibition, an expert conversation and panel discussions about the experience and management of pain.
Exhibition Launch
Monday night will feature The Art of Pain exhibition launch. Two artists, Eugenie Lee and Cat Jones, received prestigious Synapse art/science residencies to work with Professor Lorimer Moseley and his research team at Body in Mind. A third artist, George Poonkhin Khut, also worked with pain researchers – in his case, at the Children’s Hospital, Westmead – as part of his Synapse residency in 2011. Each of the three artists has created unique and different responses to our understanding of pain. Cat Jones will be presenting one-on-one performance experiences throughout the 1st week of the exhibition in the Kerry Packer Civic Gallery as part of her installation (bookings required).
RSVP to the Art of Pain Exhibition Launch
Keynote Address
Tuesday night will feature Professor Michele Sterling in conversation with Professor Moseley on whiplash and low back pain. Professor Sterling is one of the most important experts internationally on neck pain due to car accidents. She will provide an overview of what is what, what is hot and what is not, in the prevention and management of whiplash associated disorders. Her lecture will be followed by a more interactive session in which she and Professor Moseley will discuss some of the more perplexing aspects of neck pain, allowing time for questions from the floor.
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Panel Discussions
On Wednesday evening, there are two panel discussions.
5.30pm-6.30pm: Morphine and mindfulness – same room, different windows?
Morphine-type drugs, called opioids, are commonly prescribed for chronic pain, but they tend to get into the news for the wrong reasons – addiction, tolerance, accidental overdose. Professor Mark Hutchinson is a world authority on the interactions that opioids have with our brain (nervous system) and “other brain” (central immune system). Mark will teach us how these drugs can be so helpful but also problematic and how the opioids we make in our very own ‘drug cabinet in the brain’ might be similar to, and different from, those we can take in a pill or injection. Dr Tim Semple from the RAH will provide a ‘prescriber’s’ perspective. Tim is a Pain Medicine Specialist and Deputy Head of the RAH Pain Unit. Tim will discuss the use of opioids and mindfulness from his perspective running a public hospital pain clinic. Another hot topic at the moment is the therapeutic technique of mindfulness – even the TV stars are getting into that. Georgie Davidson is a physiotherapist, yoga teacher and mindfulness practitioner. She blends her diverse and complimentary skill sets to help people in pain. Georgie will talk to us about the use of mindfulness in the real world, both as part of clinical practice and as a way of life. The panel will wrap with a presentation of an applied mindfulness tool, BrightHearts, developed by The Art of Pain exhibiting artist George Poonkhin Khut and staff specialist, Dr Angie Morrow from the Children’s Hospital Westmead.
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From 7.00pm-8.00pm: Playing tricks with the mind – Illusion and its affect.
Join research fellow Valeria Bellan as she discusses how the processing of tactile and painful stimuli informs multisensory integration and body representation – and in particular how our understanding of our peripersonal space informs our experience of pain. Valeria will be joined by two of The Art of Pain exhibiting artists, Cat Jones and Eugenie Lee, who have both worked alongside Valeria and other researchers at Body in Mind to test how artistic tools and processes concerned with illusion can contribute to this research.
Register for this free event
Image: Eugenie Lee McGill Pain Questionnaire (detail) 2012