Talking about death over tea and cake - an in-person Death Café on Saturday 23 March, 3pm (GMT) at Charlton House, Charlton Road, London, SE7 8RE London
This event is offered alongside an art exhibition by Bea Denton @bea_denton_art
Death Cafe
The Death Café is a group-directed meeting where people can come to talk about death.
Talking about death is not something that we can all do with our families and friends, and yet it is something which is so often on our minds.
At the Death Café, there is an emphasis on listening and sharing, and the focus is that life is finite and we want to talk about that. We all have interests and concerns about bereavement, loss, grief or dying, especially at this time when we are still dealing with the Coronavirus, climate change, and war.
Pre-booking is essential. There are 36 spaces.
Previous participants described the event as "healthy", and said that they were "grateful for the interconnection" and "hopeful" afterwards.
“The goal of the movement is to enable people to share their fears and hopes in a fashion which does not have to treat death as a taboo – that is, as something that needs to be addressed through euphemisms or abandoned in silence.”
Maddie Denton, Reflections of the Self: Death Cafe and the Search for Personal Meaning (An exploration of death in modern society).
For more information about the Death Cafe movement, see this website https://deathcafe.com/what/
Please note that this Death Cafe will be accessible, respectful and confidential. There is no set agenda, no objective or theme. It is not a grief support group nor a counselling session. There is no intention by the organisers to lead participants to any conclusions, buy any products or take any course of action. Death Cafes are not religious, and are always ‘not for profit’ events.
“Saturday's death cafe was a real success and I hope you do more of the same. Very revealing and thought provoking.“
MY who attended a previous Death Cafe organised by Tamsin
Organisers:
Tamsin Grainger is a complementary therapy practitioner, session leader, and the author of Death and Loss in Shiatsu Practice (Singing Dragon Press).
Bea Denton is an artist and educator whose practice explores ideas around death and loss, faith and ritual. She graduated from UAL with Distinction in MA Fine Art Printmaking, and has exhibited widely, including publicly-sited work. She won the 2009 Creekside Open prize selected by Jenni Lomax; the 2007 Deptford X MacDonald Egan Award for Public Art, and the 2002 Ardizzone Prize (Major) for Printmaking. She has taught and managed courses at Arts University Bournemouth, UAL (Camberwell, London College of Communication and Central Saint Martins), at EBAC in Brazil and Artslink in China. She is a Trustee for Lewisham Education Arts Network (LEAN) and a member of the Artist’s Group, Throes of Grief.