Everything is Connected
22 May 2025–03 June 2025, 10:00 am–6:00 pm

An exhibition celebrating ground-breaking neurological research, innovative collaborations between artists, researchers and communities and UCL’s ambitious project in progress to build a world-class neuroscience centre.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
UCL: Public Art
Location
-
Crafts Council44A Pentonville Rd, LondonLondonN1 9BYUnited Kingdom

Annie Cattrell 'Everything is Connected' drawing. work in progress

“It’s like everything is drifting away and nothing is clear”. In Search of Lost Time: An Arbor project from artist Lynn Dennison and clinician scientist Dr Tom Miller

Walking in your Footsteps. An Arbor project from Dr Natalie Ryan, artist Briony Campbell and members of the Rare Dementia Support Familial Alzheimer’s disease support group

Laertes Atlas. Freya Gabie, Uranographia Britannica, John Bevis, c.1750. Drawing for ‘Laertes’ Atlas’ on stained glass. Freya Gabie

Downstream. Freya Gabie, Neurological image: Queen Square Archives

Furtive Ground. Freya Gabie:Archaeological core sample of Lambeth Red and site manager John Mitchell with clod sample

I Hear You: a Soundscape of the Unheard World of Parkinson’s.An Arbor project from neuropsychologist Dr Jennifer Foley and artist Alison Carlier

How to Swim on Land. An Arbor project from researcher Dr Louie Lee and artist Caroline Wright

Ebb & Flow. An Arbor project from neuroscientists Dr Tatiana Alvarez Giovannucci and Mar Estarellas and artist Lucy Steggals

What colour it feels to remember? What colour it feels to forget? (transition 07), digital drawing from participantscontributions towards a lenticular print installation, 2024 from Drawing the Stuff of Memory, by researcher Kirsty Lu and artist Maria Teresa Ortoleva

Pigment Timeline, Jo Volley, 2014. Photograph by Danny Treacy and Sarah Pickering

3D gilded topography of the surface of the moon, Annie Cattrell

Annie Cattrell, 'Pleasure', Royal Academy Summer Exhibition
Everything is Connected, a new visual art exhibition exploring UCL’s ground-breaking neurological research, will run at the Crafts Council, London from 22nd May to 3rd June during Dementia Action Week.
The exhibition, produced by UCL public art, celebrates the wide-ranging public art programme, which supports the ION-DRI programme - UCL’s ambitious project to build a new world-class neuroscience centre on Grays Inn Road, London. The centre, due to open in 2027, aims to accelerate the discovery of treatments for neurological conditions, including dementia – for which there is still no known cure
A range of works will be on display - many of which will be installed in the neuroscience centre when it opens in 2027. These include digital and video works, soundscapes, interactive installations, photography, painted wall works, lightboxes and sculpture.
In the exhibition, lead artist Annie Cattrell, who is creating a large-scale artwork for the new building will map and reflect on her research journey over the last four years and artist-in-residence Freya Gabie will showcase some of her work, which will be exhibited within the centre.
Since construction began in 2020, Cattrell and Gabie have been collaborating with UCL researchers, clinicians, professional services staff, patients and wider communities as part of the programme of work to broaden knowledge and awareness of the ground-breaking neurological research that will be made possible by the new facility.
The show will also feature work by artist Jo Volley, as well as the work of the Arbor programme - artist and researcher partnerships, who have been collaborating with communities with lived experience of neurological disease to create a range of creative projects.
The centre will be home to the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology; the UK Dementia Research Institute and the UCLH National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, bringing together scientists, clinicians and patients under one roof, enabling ground-breaking research to be translated from bench to beside and back again.
The show will showcase the following work
Annie Cattrell

Annie has been commissioned to make a series of major public artworks She has worked extensively with academics to understand the scale and magnitude of the research taking place

Walking in your Footsteps
A collaborative project between artist Briony Campbell, neurologist Dr Natalie Ryan and members of the Familial Alzheimer’s disease (FAD) support group

I Hear You: A Soundscape of the Unheard World of Young Onset Parkinson’s.
Artist Alison Carlier and neuropsychologist Dr Jennifer Foley explore the unheard voices of younger people affected by Parkinson’s
Freya Gabie

Freya has been exploring the unique history of 256 Grays Inn Road and its significance as a hospital to create an archive of research as well as a series of works for the building.

Artist Maria Teresa Ortoleva and neuroscientist Dr Kirsty Lu take a compassionate look at the lived experience and fear of memory loss.

How to Swim on Land
Artist Caroline Wright and researcher Dr Louie Lee explore the unique relationship that people living with neuromuscular diseases have with water.
Jo Volley

Jo has been commissioned to develop a new work for the public spaces in the building rooted in her research exploring colour and pigments.

Artist Lucy Steggals and neuroscientists Dr Tatiana A. Giovannucci and Mar Estarellas connected artists, scientists, carers and people with lived experience of dementia to share experiences of uncertainty

In Search of Lost Time
Clinician scientist Dr Tom Miller and artist Lynn Dennison look at memory loss in patients to give a voice to those with LG11-limbic encephalitis to describe and capture the first-person experiences of amnesia.