Cradle to Grave by Pharmacopoeia
2003
To hear an audio description of this object,
written especially for blind and partially sighted visitors, follow
this link: Audio description (4m 40s)
(mp3 format, 3.20 MB). To download, right click and 'save target
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Link to Disc' (Mac).
Cradle to Grave explores our approach to health in
Britain today. The piece incorporates a lifetime supply of
prescribed drugs knitted into two lengths of fabric, illustrating
the medical stories of one woman and one man.
Each length contains over 14,000 drugs, the estimated average
prescribed to every person in Britain in their lifetime. This does
not include pills we might buy over the counter, which would
require about 40,000 pills each.
Some of the treatments are common to both: each starts at birth
with an injection of vitamin K and immunizations, and both take
antibiotics and painkillers at various times. Other treatments are
more specific. The woman takes contraceptive pills, and hormone
replacement therapy in middle age. The man has asthma and hay fever
when young, but enjoys good health until his fifties. He finally
stops smoking after a bad chest infection when he is seventy. He is
treated for high blood pressure for the last ten years of his life
and has a heart attack and dies of a stroke in his seventies. He
takes as many pills in the last ten years of his life as in the
first sixty-six.
Cradle to Grave also contains family photographs and
other personal objects and documents. The captions, written by the
owners, trace typical events in people's lives. These show that
maintaining a sense of well-being is more complex than just
treating episodes of illness.
Pharmacopoeia are Susie Freeman, Dr Liz Lee and David
Critchley.