It Really Doesn’t Matter If Your Curtains Don’t Match!
It Really Doesn't Matter If Your Curtains Don't Match! is Anna Boggon’s most recent community arts project.​
Funded by Arts Council England, the project explores concepts of neuroscience and neurodiversity through a series of public and pop-up neighbourhood events, an exhibition, educational workshops and a public architectural intervention.​​
It Really Doesn’t Matter If Your Curtains Don’t Match!
Exhibition Alexandra Palace and Park London 2024
Visual Artist Anna Boggon presents a new interactive exhibition of fantastical artworks that explore concepts of neuroscience and neurodiversity through sound, sculpture, photography, video, painting and collaborative interventions.
Alexandra Place Park sets the stage for “It Really Doesn't Matter If Your Curtains Don’t Match” (nature meets urban), as a place of amusement and chance encounters witnessed, by the artist and mother from an outsider's perspective, as if looking in like an extra in the wrong movie.
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It Really Doesn't Matter If Your Curtains Don't Match
Alexandra Palace and Park, East Court, Alexandra Palace, London
Alexandra Place Park sets the stage for “It Really Doesn't Matter If Your Curtains Don’t Match” (nature meets urban), as a place of amusement and chance encounters witnessed, by the artist and mother from an outsider's perspective, as if looking in like an extra in the wrong movie.
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Through the journey of unravelling and unwrapping, IRDM shines a light on the positive ‘differences’ that can be found within the complex intricacies of Neuroscience and Neurodiversity as well as acknowledging lived realities. It explores ways to question fixed perspectives and create a greater awareness of differing thought processes through exploration experience, conversation, and above all, community.
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C U Next Tuesday, Language and Miscommunication Saturday 8th June 2024
Speakers
Cinzia Greco, Cultural Anthropologist, will discuss divergent ethnographies, the intersection of anthropology and neurodiversity, and what it means to do fieldwork
as an Autistic person.