Category: artists

A Place to Heal

by Mark Holman

A multi-disciplinary creative, Mark Holman’s practice initially focused on figurative subjects – both sculpted and drawn. Recently, his process has drawn on parallel creative ventures as an actor, musician and horticulturalist, evolving beyond the purely figurative to focus on human connections with nature in a more social engaged way. The goal of Mark’s current projects is to engage community and encourage discourse, supporting sustainability and promoting healthier relationships with the environment. He is a featured artist in our Cornwall Edition.

When I was approached by a local Hospital Trust to help create a garden that enabled Intensive Care Patients to recover within nature, I jumped at the opportunity to make a difference in a tangible way. The garden I designed – underneath the critical care unit at Royal Cornwall Hospital NHS Trust in Truro – is one of the first therapeutic gardens in the UK that enables very ill patients to spend time outside with the help of life-support technology.

Mark’s book, A Place to Heal, is available to buy here.

The garden contains a combination of sensory plants, hospital bed areas, and seating spots for families, carers, and medical professionals: a space where the patients can be surrounded by a therapeutic combination of friends, family and nature. Kym Vigus, RCHT Critical Care Staff Nurse, calls it “a huge asset to our unit” that generates “incredibly positive experiences” for patients: “For clinical teams to be able to bring patients down to the courtyard to feel the fresh air and see the sky, to smell the plants and hear birdsong, is very special.”

‘A Place to Heal’ evolved from my work designing and installing the therapeutic Healing Garden, a project which planted the seeds of an idea for a sculptural installation in which a reclaimed hospital bed would be planted with local botanical species so that it looked like it was coming out of the ground. This installation was first exhibited to the public at the Royal Cornwall Garden Society Show. It continued in five different locations around West Cornwall, with the bed eventually moving to Victoria Square, in front of Truro Cathedral.

We were lucky to get the artist Kurt Jackson involved, both with the garden itself, and a book of art and writing that grew out of the bed tour. An exploration of relationships with plants, why we need nature and why we need to work to preserve it, the book sets out to explore how plants can heal us and how we can heal the environment.

As we ferried the bed from one location to another, we chatted to people about the Healing Garden project, the benefits of nature, and how regular engagement with nature can have positive effects on both mental and physical health.

In the gallery of images below, I have placed a hospital bed in a series of different environments to explore the effect landscape has on it. We captured some amazing photos that symbolise the ways our surroundings affect our ability to heal. With projects like the Healing Garden, green social prescribing, and installations like ‘A Place to Heal’ as public conversation-starters, we are hopefully moving towards greater engagement with how healthcare strategies meet the natural world.

Gallery

Artists

Featured artists

Mark Holman

A multi-disciplinary creative, Mark Holman’s practice initially focused on figurative subjects - both sculpted and drawn. Recently, his process has drawn on parallel creative ventures as an actor, musician and horticulturalist, evolving beyond the purely figurative to focus on human connections with nature in a more socially engaged way. The goal of Mark’s current projects is to engage community and encourage discourse, supporting sustainability and promoting healthier relationships with the environment.

Kate Horsley

Kate's illustrations are made from a combination of collage, ink and watercolour paintings and fabric. She has taught photography workshops for a number of years in the UK and France, specialising in alternative processes like wet cyanotype, wetplate collodion, gum bichromate and polaroid emulsion lifts. Kate's main subject-matter is the natural world and she experiments with handmade botanical inks, prints on birch bark, hand-coloured images, and prints made from leaves, flowers and grasses.

Samuel Horsley

Samuel Horsley is an artist and printmaker whose images range from loveably strange cats to macabre gods and ethereal monsters. During his Graphic Design degree at Central St Martins, he specialised in illustration and was influenced by the work of Goya, Švankmajer and Scarfe. He prints screens and linos at Hot Bed Press Studio and he instagrams as @idonthaveorgans

Sue Lewington

Sue's ink and watercolour sketches of local scenes have popular appeal. A great number of her journals and sketches have been published in book form and are widely available in bookshops and galleries throughout Cornwall and Devon. She says: ‘I want to record the experience of living on the edge of the land, whether in Scilly, Penwith, or my new-found love and inspiration, Shetland.’

Liz Manning

Liz Manning gave up a career in occupational therapy to move to Cornwall and do an MA in Creative Writing at the University of Plymouth, She now writes fulltime. She specialises in (but is not limited to) visual poetry and also has a novel in progress. Her work frequently focuses on faith, family, and mental health. Liz has had work published in INK magazine and the Harpy Hybrid Review. She is also on the committee organising the new Looe Festival of Words.

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