Traumascapes Arts Festival 2025 | Creative methods for reflective practice
Traumascapes Arts Festival 2025 | Creative methods for reflective practice
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This workshop will introduce a range of accessible creative methods that can be used to support reflexivity. Suitable for researchers, artists, and other practitioners interested in initiating or developing their reflective practice through arts-based approaches. All levels of experience welcome, curiosity and playfulness encouraged!
with Laura E. Fischer
Laura E. Fischer (she/they)
Laura E. Fischer is the Founder & CEO of Traumascapes. Laura’s award-winning art practice focuses on the reclaiming and rewriting of the sociocultural narrative of trauma on survivors’ own terms and her research explores the embodied experience of trauma and creative body-based approaches to healing. Laura is also Visiting Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience at King’s College London, Visiting Lecturer on the MASc Creative Health at UCL, Visiting Lecturer on the MSc Creative Arts and Mental Health at Queen Mary University of London, Visiting Lecturer on the MA Performance: Screen at Central Saint Martins, and she serves on the Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee for ATTUNE at the University of Oxford and the Editorial Advisory Board of The Lancet Psychiatry. Laura has published, presented, and exhibited internationally since 2005, and her artwork is held in the Central Saint Martins Museum Collection.
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Festival
The Traumascapes Arts Festival 2025 explores survivorhood through exhibition, film screenings, dance performances, talks, and workshops – all from the perspective of artists and researchers with lived experience of trauma.
See full programme here: https://traumascapes.org/arts-festival
About us
Traumascapes is a survivor-led organisation dedicated to changing the ecosystem of trauma and creating new horizons for survivors through art and science. Our work is bold, disruptive, and caring. It serves trauma survivors (individuals and groups who have been impacted by traumatic experiences such as, but not limited to, violence or abuse), persons and communities who support survivors, & professionals, organisations, and institutions who work on trauma and/or with survivors.
Accessibility
The venue is fully wheelchair accessible with step-free access throughout. An exhibition information pack is available with visual and conceptual descriptions of each artwork. A large-print pack is also available. All films screened as part of the festival include closed captions. Peer support workers and a quiet space with noise cancelling headphones and fidget toys are available on site (see the 'Caring for yourself and others' section below).
If you have any other access needs, please contact Julian and we will do our best to accommodate: julian@traumascapes.org.
Caring for yourself and your community
What to expect
The Traumascapes Arts Festival explores what it means to survive trauma, both individually and collectively. It includes the torment, the joy, and the messiness in between - all from the perspective of artists and researchers with lived experience of trauma. There are mentions/themes of colonialism, systemic violence, childhood and adulthood abuse (sexual, physical, emotional) and neglect, but there are no direct visual depictions of violence or abuse.
Self and mutual care
It is important to hold space to explore trauma in order to raise awareness and to come together as a community to challenge the status quo and support collective healing. To create change, we must confront the reality of trauma - and this reality is a painful one.
But, as we do so, we must also counteract the normalisation of violence by fostering safety and protecting our wellbeing. As you explore the festival, we invite you to look after yourself and one another. Choose whether and when to engage, how much, and with whom. Step out when you need to and take care of yourself however feels right. Check-in with your peers too.
Support
Peer support workers will be on site throughout the festival and you can chat to them any time. You can recognise them from their frog badges.
A quiet space is located on the far end of the venue, on the right, where you can stay as long as you like, whenever you like.
You can find noise-cancelling headphones, fidget toys, and art materials in the quiet space, which you can use at any time.
Creative meditation and embodiment workshops are scheduled as part of the festival.
An audio guide with grounding invitations is available for anyone to use as a way to explore the exhibition accompanied by some gentle grounding practices.
For additional sources of support, please click here.
We may not be able to avoid all hurt and harm, but we can nurture safety and negotiate trauma with openness, mutual care, empathy, and grace. Thank you for being part of this.
Location
The Art Pavilion, E3 4QY