Output details
34 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory
Sheffield Hallam University
Exhibition in a box
Building on Chamberlain’s ‘engagingaging’ research, 'exhibition in a box' is a transnational research platform that involves health academics, health practitioners, and older people in the UK, Holland, Germany, Switzerland, Poland and Malta. Developing the notion of the exhibition as a research tool and inspired by Duchamp’s 'Boîte en valise', the exhibition is distilled into a ‘suitcase’ and compares the experiences of older people across Europe to inform design in supporting independence and quality of life in later life. Rather than the onus being placed on older people to physically access a traditional exhibition space, 'exhibition in a box' seeks to bring the exhibition to the older person and to transform the home into a discursive research arena, providing individuals with a tangible prompt to scaffold conversation. 'Exhibition in a box' provides a readymade tool and structure for health practitioners to creatively engage with older people. A set of principles have been developed, which position the participants as the ‘expert’ and encourage choice and decision-making.
Everyday objects, photographs, and textual material comprise the ‘critical artefacts’ defined through the user-workshops undertaken in the engingaging project. These ‘exhibits’ (in the box) are prompts that enable engagement with users in a range of contextual environments, the components of which become part of the exhibition. Leaning on Duchamp’s approach, each ‘exhibition’ is unique through the evolving contribution from the participants. Twelve boxes were produced and distributed for use with health specialists in collaboration with older users across Europe. These provide a research tool and method for engagement with older people to help develop our understanding of designing for older people. A paper describing the research approach was presented at the HCI International Conference USA (2013) and published by Springer.