Reconnecting with the Home-Start Family Group!

In this week’s edition of the blog we are excited to reveal another slice of our ongoing ‘Reconnect’ project and showcase the fantastic charitable organisation, Home-Start Dundee!

Home-Start plays a vital role supporting parents and giving their children the best possible start in life. Their positive impact makes a real difference to the lives of children and families in communities across the UK. They work alongside parents, in their own homes, to help them cope with the stresses and strains of life and make sure they have the skills, confidence and strength they need to nurture their children.

Before the Corona Virus Pandemic, Home-Start ran regular group sessions at a local venue, where parents and their children could come along and meet other families. Pre-lockdown, the children are given the opportunity to play, learn, have fun and socialise with toys, books and often activities are designed to nourish and encourage their development. Parents also get the chance to meet and talk to other adults and many parents discover they are going through the same kinds of experiences and feel less alone. It was vital that the group continued to remain connected virtually throughout the pandemic. Home-Start currently facilitate these group sessions regularly online to help tackle feelings of isolation and loneliness during these uncertain times.

Screen grab of Reconnect session.

The Home-Start family group have previously worked with the Creative Learning Team on the 150th Anniversary project ‘The People’s Story’, participating in a series of outreach weaving sessions using a loom to create a year-long community weave featuring the work over 850 participants. We have also worked together to create ‘Bash Street’s Back at the Mc Menace’ inspired lanterns as part of Dundee’s first ever UNESCO City of Design Street parade.

For this part of the ‘Reconnect’ Project we been liaising with the group on a regular basis since January. We have worked closely with the participants to tailor a selection of resources and materials for them to use at home. Each family will receive a tote bag of art materials, a custom-made ‘Think Big’ book to help them explore our city, keep them connected to the museum collection, and providing space to record their thoughts, feelings and discoveries.

Throughout each online session we share inspirational ideas for the parents and their children to engage in activities together, talk about current exhibitions, history and importantly, mental health and wellbeing. There will also be a physical element to the project through dance. We are working in partnership with local dance company Shaper/Caper to provide the families with a series of online dance sessions for them to do in the comfort of their own homes. Each of these ‘A Day to Play’ dance sessions will be pre-recorded using green screens to incorporate the museums collection, so that busy families can participate at a time that is convenient for them.

After the Easter break we will continue our collaboration with Home-Start with more practical activities to develop knowledge and understanding of the Museum’s Collection, encourage creativity to improve mental and physical health and wellbeing and of course keep connected with one another throughout these challenging times.

Keep up-to-date with ‘Reconnect’ through our online and social media channels as the project progresses!

The project has been made possible thanks to Art Fund support and additional funding from Tayside Healthcare Arts Trust.

Blether TayGether Reconnects!

For this week’s blog, we are introducing our work with Alzheimer Scotland for ‘Reconnect’. Alzheimer Scotland runs regular support groups for those living with Dementia and Alzheimer Disease, with a focus on ‘living well with dementia’, and there are lots of varied activities and groups to support individuals and their families.

The group that we have been working with for ‘Reconnect’ all attend the Blether Together group in Dundee and we were delighted to be able to join in with their regular sessions and work with the participants for seven weeks. These sessions normally run in person but due to the Covid-19 restrictions currently in place in Scotland, these have moved online.

Microsoft Teams call for Blether TayGether sessions.

The group had previously worked with the team and were about to start another project with us when the Covid-19 pandemic hit. Like many organisations, we suddenly had to adjust to remote working, furloughed staff and building closures. Unfortunately, the group’s project with us was put on hold. Once things began to open up in late 2020, we were successful with an application to the Art Fund to support ‘Reconnect’, and we were able to revisit the project and adapt it to our current times.

We have taken the model of the Blether Together sessions that are run by Alzheimer Scotland, and the team join in with these online sessions, supporting engagement with the museum collection and exhibitions and provide a bespoke and personal learning and engagement experience. For the project we produced a ‘Memory Journal’, to be a resource to support reminiscence and the sharing of personal stories during the sessions. The sessions are informal and we always have a cup of tea to hand and stories to share!

The Memory Journal has four themes, Childhood, Working Life, Social Life and Hobbies & Pastimes. Alongside these themes and the personal memories and stories shared during the sessions, we also have been exploring our ‘Talking Dundee’ oral history archive and have been listening to a variety of sound clips focusing on Dundee memories related to the four themes and these have been fantastic conversation starters and have helped us visualise Dundee in times gone by. We have also introduced our two temporary exhibitions, Time and Tide: The Transformation of the Tay and A Love Letter to Dundee: Joseph McKenzie Photographs 1964-1987 and had two great online sessions with museum curators Anna Robertson and David Lampard, to explore these together.

One of the most important elements of these sessions are the opportunity to connect with each other and to share memories and stories. The Blether TayGether sessions are about creating a safe and welcoming social space to learn together and share personal stories, and to help to reduce feelings of social isolation, which has affected many of us during the current global pandemic. We are looking forward to our remaining sessions with the group and are hoping that we can meet in person once normal services resume!

Keep up-to-date with ‘Reconnect’ through our online and social media channels as the project progresses!

The project has been made possible thanks to Art Fund support and additional funding from Tayside Healthcare Arts Trust.

Re-interpreting Joseph McKenzie – ST/ART Group

Today we are profiling one of our ‘Reconnect’ project participant groups, the ST/ART Photography Group who are supported by THAT (Tayside Healthcare Arts Trust). THAT was set up in 2002 to develop the arts in healthcare across Tayside, working to improve the health and wellbeing of people with a variety of Long Term Conditions and enhance the quality of healthcare environments.

One of the enormous challenges that we, as a team, have faced throughout our initial development and ongoing delivery of ‘Reconnect’, has been how to connect to participants who are unable to visit the museum in person due to closures, and how to support those who may be housebound and/or isolated due to the current COVID-19 restrictions. Another challenge has been how can we provide, deep and meaningful learning and engagement opportunities when we are unable to meet in person. We decided to utilise video conferencing platforms including Zoom, Facebook Messenger and Microsoft Teams to connect with our participants and to deliver ‘Reconnect’, and we made sure for each group we use the platform that they have been using previously and are comfortable with.

The ST/ART group have been focusing on creating their own body of photographic work, inspired by the work and photographic essays of Dundee-based photographer and tutor Joseph McKenzie and our temporary exhibition ‘A Love Letter to Dundee: Joseph Mckenzie Photographs 1964 – 1987’.

Supported by the Creative Learning Team, Chris Kelly from THAT and freelance artist David Scott, the group meet weekly through Zoom for their ‘Reconnect’ sessions. They have started to create their art works and have been able to capture their images using cameras or mobile phones, either from home or when out for daily exercise, in keeping with current COVID-19 restrictions.

Each session focuses on outlining a photographic exercise, inspired by Joseph McKenzie’s work, with a critique of the previous week’s images and support to develop new skills and individual artistic and creative vision. The group have also had a ‘virtual curatorial session’ with our Fine and Applied Arts Manager Anna Robertson, which offered a fantastic opportunity to ask questions directly to Anna and to gain an insight into the curatorial process and further information about Joseph McKenzie and his life and work.

The ST/ART group still have a few more ‘Reconnect’ sessions before completing their photography work and we’re really looking forward to seeing more of their amazing photographs. One project outcome for the ST/ART group is the creation of an online gallery to exhibit their photography work and we are very excited to facilitate this for them and to celebrate and share their achievements!

Keep up-to-date with ‘Reconnect’ through our online and social media channels as the project progresses!

The project has been made possible thanks to Art Fund support and additional funding from Tayside Healthcare Arts Trust.

The McManus ‘Reconnects’!

We are delighted to be able to share with you our newest learning & engagement project, Reconnect! This is being delivered by the team whilst home-working and we are very swiftly grasping the skills to navigate zoom, teams and messenger!

Delivery of ‘Reconnect’ will enable The Creative Learning Team to continue to provide rich valuable cultural experiences remotely, for community groups with long-term health conditions and local family groups, enhancing positive cultural participation and ensuring that isolated and shielding participants can still benefit from the rich experiences the museum has to offer whilst the doors are temporarily closed.

We are thrilled to be working across the museum with our colleagues, cultural partners and freelance artists to support those most in need. Participant groups involved are from Alzheimer Scotland, Home-Start Dundee and Tayside Healthcare Arts Trust.

All project activities have been co-produced and are designed to spark imagination and support shared, remote learning experiences, utilising the museum’s new temporary exhibitions ‘Time and Tide: The Transformation of the Tay’ and ‘A Love Letter to Dundee: Joseph McKenzie Photographs 1964-1987’ as creative catalysts throughout the project. Both exhibitions narrate Dundee’s stories through film, photography, audio, objects and artworks from across the city’s collections and celebrate the influence the River Tay has had and still has on our city.

Activities include digital reminiscence sessions and tutor led zoom sessions to develop skills in photography. A wide range of family friendly digital activities, free art kits, and artist-led art activities, as well as specially choreographed museum-themed online dance sessions. Participants will also have a wide range of opportunities to share their own stories and co-produce final project artworks and publications.

Members of the ST/ART group during a ‘Reconnect’ photography session.

Keep up to date with our social media channels and our team blog to learn more about the project and the amazing work being created and facilitated throughout Reconnect!

The project has been made possible thanks to Art Fund support and additional funding from Tayside Healthcare Arts Trust.