Audio only documentary about the 'Us and Them' project.
'Us And Them' is a collaboration between award-winning portrait and social documentary photographer Emma Brown, disabled artists from Freewheelers Theatre and Media Company, On the Record, and King's College London.
The audio was produced & edited by Laura Khan Mitchison from On the Record.
The project was shortlisted for the British Journal of Photography's
The Portrait of Humanity Vol. 6
'Us and Them' was exhibited at the Horton Epsom between 1st and 14th December 2023.
The Freewheelers have co-created portraits exploring visual representations of physical disability in Surrey, past and present, following audio recorded discussions about pose, costume, gesture and identity. The portraits have been created using a traditional Victorian ‘tintype’ technique, which creates a photographic image on a thin sheet of coated glass or metal (glass plates).
The Us and Them artwork has been inspired by reviewing nineteenth-century archive photographs of patients taken on admission to the ‘Epsom Cluster’ of psychiatric hospitals. The hospitals also housed people with learning disabilities, epilepsy and Down’s Syndrome, which were classified in the same way as mental illness at that time.
The new portraits are provocatively paired with the original Victorian photographs, to provoke public conversations about discrimination and how disability is understood, especially through visual representations. This striking new collection of images and oral histories highlights the diversity of disabled artists, celebrates commonality, and unsettles the differences between ‘Us and Them’.
Us and Them has been supported by Surrey History Centre and with funding from King’s College London. Oral history and audio production support is being provided by On the Record.
About Freewheelers Theatre & Media Company
Freewheelers are a diverse and creative company of people with disabilities based in Surrey. They work alongside directors, producers, composers, artists and writers, to co-create and produce engaging, thought-provoking, funny, joyous and highly entertaining theatre, dance, film, and music.
For over thirty years, Freewheelers has been challenging perceptions and defying expectations.
Jamie from Freewheelers chose to be paired with Walter Cartright, a railway porter who died after 9 months in the asylum.
© Emma Brown Photography
Flossie, Jamie's canine partner, © Emma Brown Photography
Alice from Freewheelers chose to be paired with Rose Harris
© Emma Brown Photography
Pete from Freewheelers chose to be paired with workhouse survivor Frederick Tarrant
© Emma Brown Photography