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Getting started with creative research

,
Past
  • Free
  • Seminar
  • British Sign Language (online)
  • Auto-captioned
A laptop open on a desk with two images on the screen. On the left of the laptop's screen is a digital artwork showing part of a black and white photograph of Queen Victoria's face. The top half of her head is replaced with an orange dome representative of the sun. On the right is a portrait of Sophie Schneider in Wellcome Collection's Reading Room, she is wearing a black top and has curly blond hair.
Getting Started with Creative Research, Artwork on screen (left): When the sun goes down. © Gergo Varga (varrgo.com) for Wellcome Collection. Portrait on screen (right): Sophie Schneider. Photo: Steven Pocock. © Source: Wellcome.

In this recording you’ll meet three different artists who will share how they got started with creative research at Wellcome Collection. The event is facilitated by Sophie Schneider from Wellcome Collection’s Research and Development team. 

You’ll learn about each artist’s career, and their experiences navigating the online collections and in-person spaces at Wellcome Collection. They will talk about how they have used our archives and collections to both inspire and challenge their research. They will also share examples of their work, from digital animations and illustrations to experimental writing and filmmaking.

There’ll then be a Q&A. Wellcome Collection’s Research Development Specialist, Elma Brenner, who focuses on developing early career researchers, will also join the Q&A.

This online-only event took place on Wellcome Collection’s YouTube channel.

Dates

,
Past

Need to know

Guaranteed

Booking a ticket guarantees you entry to the online event. You will be given joining instructions in your confirmation email.

British Sign Language (online)

This event is British Sign Language interpreted. An interpreter will be embedded in the event livestream or visible on screen for online viewers.

Auto-captioned

There will be automatically generated subtitles for this event.

For more information, please visit our Accessibility page. If you have any queries about accessibility, please email us at access@wellcomecollection.org or call 0 2 0. 7 6 1 1. 2 2 2 2

Our event terms and conditions

About your contributors

Photograph of artist Myrto Farmaki

Myrto Farmaki

Artist

Myrto Farmaki is an interdisciplinary artist and filmmaker whose work addresses ideas of transhistorical and intergenerational trauma. Myrto undertook a six-month placement with the Research Development team at Wellcome Collection in 2021, where she developed a project called ‘Shaping Narratives’. ‘Shaping Narratives’ looks at the Medical Women’s Federation archives and encourages us to think about how the archival and fragmentary relate to each other.

Photograph of artist Clara Searle

Clara Searle

Artist

Clara Searle has a background in communication design, and her art practice explores identity and everyday living through illustration, painting and reflective writing. Clara is a PhD researcher at Loughborough University, London and is currently undertaking a Techne Racial Justice Placement at Wellcome Collection. Her doctoral research explores the relationships women of colour in Britain have with books.

Black and white head and shoulders collaged artwork showing a portrait of Gergo Varga.

Gergo Varga

Artist

Gergo Varga is an illustrator, collage animator, motion designer and the name behind ‘varrgo’. varrgo is a place where Gergo creates and animates mixed-media projects, particularly in the style of collages and cut-outs. He enjoys working with things that have already had a life, from old magazines to scribbles in a notebook. His longest-running creative project is ‘oners’, where he visualises one-minute quotes from contemporary thinkers. Gergo created the animations and illustrations for ‘Apocalypse How?’ and ‘Eugenics and Other Stories’, published on Wellcome Collection Stories.

Photograph of Sophie Schneider

Sophie Schneider

Facilitator

Sophie has an academic background in modern languages and international development, but a passion for arts and the creative sector. Sophie is on the graduate programme at Wellcome Collection and has worked across the organisation for the past 18 months. Her work includes reflecting on power imbalances in the collection and how they can better represent a plurality of voices, perspectives and types of knowledge.