British Health Care Arts Centre

  • British Health Care Arts Centre
Date:
1984-1993
Reference:
SA/BHC
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

The material consists mainly of correspondence between Dr J.H. Baron and others involved in the project.

Publication/Creation

1984-1993

Physical description

6 boxes

Arrangement

The collection is divided into sections as follows:

A Hospital Arts [Society] Linda Moss

B Health Care Arts

C British Health Care Arts Centre

D Committees

E Correspondence

F Donors

G Astra Arts Awards

H Booklets

Acquisition note

These papers were given to the library at Wellcome Collection by Dr Hugh Baron in July 1996. They formed part of a larger group of papers that has been divided into four separate collections: GC/199 (Dr J H Baron), GC/241 (Balsalazide), SA/PRO (The Prout Club) and SA/BHC (British Health Care Arts Centre).

Biographical note

Dr Hugh Baron was keen to establish a society for the promotion of arts in hospital, and he and other interested parties proposed to set up a centre for this. A Steering Committee was established. Originally, negotiations were with Manchester Polytechnic funded by the Carnegie Trust (but they pulled out when staff were being appointed, as it was counter to their remit). However, the Committee found itself unable to agree on a Director, and plans to set up the centre in Manchester were scrapped. This led to some of the Committee members (notably Peter Senior, who applied for the post of Director) breaking away. Eventually, Senior established a rival institution in Manchester (Arts for Health. See D.1) and the British Health Care Arts Centre based itself in Dundee at the Duncan of Jordanstane Art College, under the Directorship of Malcom Miles. It was financed through donations from charitable trusts and foundations.

In 1993, through financial instability, the Centre was wound up. However, the English venture merged with the arts project at the United Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (at Leeds General Infirmary), whilst the Scottish arm remained in Dundee. The two institutions were separate in terms of finance and management but still retained collaborative links.

The aims of the BHCAC were: (a) to improve the environment in all health care buildings, by encouraging the development of the arts in these buildings through the provision of an advice and consultancy service, both to the health authorities and to arts organisations and projects working with the Health Service, and (b) to initiate studies and arts in health care.

Every year, the BHCAC awarded the Astra Award funded by Astra Pharmaceuticals.

Appraisal note

No attempt has been made by the archivist to reorganise the papers; although files and minutes within files have been rearranged in chronological order.

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Identifiers

Accession number

  • 638