Audrey Amiss: The Surviving Exhibitions

Stop 10/10: Missing artworks

Back to list of stops

As you can see, there is no artwork on the wall because the original works are missing. However, you will notice one drawing that looks like a woman, but it is a replica, not an original by Audrey Amiss.

Amiss had a past exhibition called ‘Drawings from a Locked Ward’, but the original artworks and photocopies now appear to be lost. After the exhibition, the artworks were distributed, some were framed, some were given to charity shops and others were sent to editors of Mad Pride publications, as well as to the police and MPs.

We searched the Wellcome archive to find the original artworks but found nothing. However, we did find a price list, invoices, an account book and letters about the upcoming exhibition, although not the artworks themselves.

We also found a list of works, references to other sketchbooks that the Wellcome Collection does not hold, references to photocopies showing that she sometimes exhibited copies instead of the original artworks, and scrapbooks that give an insight into her involvement with mental health survivor movements.

So, although we cannot show the original artworks, we have chosen to display blank spaces on the wall with labels instead. The appearance of the original artworks is unknown, but the labels offer some information and allow you to imagine them.

We have set up this space to reflect what the exhibition may have been like. It is a space to gather, raise awareness of psychiatric mistreatment, such as force and detention, and to support greater agency for people with mental health needs. This was being fought for then and it continues today.