Sat, 25 Feb 2023 11:00 - 13:00
Zoom
What does disability-led art practice mean? 
How can we be thinking about access across disability communities and in different countries?
This talk features collaborators and participants of Edible Art Club, a new intercultural collaboration between Unseen Art Initiatives (Singapore) and Aung Mental Health Initiative (Myanmar), which seeks to bring together the unique capacities and experiences of disabled communities from Myanmar and Singapore, through art-based community engagement.
Join us as we share about building an understanding of the unique contexts around working with disabled communities in both countries, facilitating communication and connection between the public, art groups and disabled communities. 
A Q&A will follow the sharing.

Speakers:
Alecia Neo (Unseen Art Initiatives)
Penny Chong (Unseen Art Initiatives)
Dr Aung Min (Aung Mental Health)
Dr San San Oo (Aung Mental Health)
Delly Fareda Juma’at (Club Heal)
Asha Adnan (Asha & Co)
Aung Ko Oo (Golden Eagle Group)
Ni Ni Mar (Aung Mental Health)
Winne Phu (VI)
Access  Speeh-to-Text document here

ACCESSIBILITY 
Speech-to-text interpretation and Singapore Sign Language interpretation (SgSL) is available for this event. 

Edible Art Club is a new intercultural collaboration between Unseen Art Initiatives (Singapore) and Aung Mental Health Initiative (Myanmar), which seeks to bring together the unique capacities and experiences of disabled communities from Myanmar and Singapore, through the art-based community engagement. The art and cultural activities shared with these communities arise from the collaborating organisations’ combined experience in art-based community-building, working with disabled artists and persons and engaging with mental health and wellbeing. 
For Singapore, apart from our community of visually-impaired persons, our partners include Club HEAL, an NGO that focuses on mental health, including Dementia, and Asha & Co, a peer support community that promotes mental wellness through cooking, art and community gatherings. Our programme involves a weekly gathering to prepare and cook one locally inspired meal led by visually-impaired home chef Penny Chong, followed by artmaking and collective reflections. During this collaboration, both groups supported each other’s processes online via Zoom dialogues, observation of each other’s workshops, host exchange between collaborators and mutual feedback on each other’s activities.
Aung Mental Health Initiative hosted a joint physical art exhibition from 21 - 27 Jan 2023 at Institut Français de Birmanie, Yangon, Myanmar, connecting with Singapore’s collaborators and communities with Myanmar's socially engaged art and cultural scene.
Since 2015, Aung Mental Health Initiative has worked with people with different mental health conditions, psychosocial and intellectual disabilities through art-based initiatives (WHO Human Rights and mental health department documented the Aung MHI as a good practice technical package community mental health service in 2021.)
Aung Mental Health Initiative believes that an integrated approach is critical to improving the long-term well-being of people with mental health issues. Our service users and their families can access different types of support to address their needs, including counselling, psychiatric medication, support groups, medical care, and vocational skills training. Through our community-based care model and art-based interventions, we assist people at risk of being institutionalised and those living in mental hospitals by building meaningful lives in their communities. Our programme also supports families in caring for their loved ones in their homes. It offers caregivers respite by creating safe spaces for their loved ones to learn and engage with art and community activities.
Unseen Art Initiatives is a Singapore-based arts platform that aims to evoke and harness the creative potential of people through the arts. Through arts-based interventions and curating art exhibitions and cultural programmes, we enable collaborations between professional and emerging disabled artists across creative industries and with schools, community organisations and public institutions. Our flagship projects include Move For?ward (Unseen: Inside Out) 2020 - 2022, which premiered at the National Gallery Singapore's Light to Night Festival, Unseen: Constellations (2014 - 2016), a mentorship programme for visually-impaired youth and Unseen: Shift Lab (2015) a collaborative project with Dialogue-in-the-Dark Malaysia and artists from Kuala Lumpur. Our platform also developed research for the pilot Touch Art Collection for the Singapore Art Museum and National Gallery Singapore, researching accessibility practices for visually-impaired patrons in museums.

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