Guardians of Sleep: London museum catches dreams to document Covid-19

The museum launched a new project titled “Guardians of Sleep" with an aim to provide an emotional and personal narrative of the pandemic to future generations.

A visitor looks at The Gundestrup cauldron displayed in the "Celts: art and identity" exhibition at the British Museum in London, Britain on September 23, 2015.
Reuters

A visitor looks at The Gundestrup cauldron displayed in the "Celts: art and identity" exhibition at the British Museum in London, Britain on September 23, 2015.

The Museum of London has announced a project to collect the dreams of Londoners during the coronavirus pandemic as a way to document the impact of the crisis.

The lives of inhabitants of the British capital have changed "not just in the day to day" because of the pandemic, but also "in relation to how we sleep and dream", the museum said.

The project, dubbed "Guardians of Sleep", will look to collect the dreams in the form of oral histories.

It will also explore what insight dreams might offer into mental health and ways of coping with external stresses, especially in times of crisis.

According to a King's College London/Ipsos MORI survey in June, the global Covid-19 crisis can trouble the mind not just during waking hours but also during sleep.

The Museum of London is launching the initiative in partnership with the Museum of Dreams based at Western University in Canada.

READ MORE: UN warns of global mental health crisis due to Covid-19 pandemic

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Common experience 

Foteini Aravani, digital curator at the Museum of London, said the recording of dreams would allow it to "document a key shared experience from the pandemic" but also to stretch the definition of a "museum object".

"Traditionally, when museums have collected dreams it has been in the form of artistic impression, for example, paintings or drawings influenced by the events.

However, this can often dissociate the dream from the dreamer," she said.

"We will collect dreams as first-person oral histories with the aim to provide a more emotional and personal narrative of this time for future generations," she added.

Sharon Sliwinski, creator of the Museum of Dreams, said the research with the Museum of London "aims to provide a rich resource for further understanding the significance of dream-life as a mechanism for working through social conflict".

The project will take place in February 2021 with the public invited to speak about their Covid dreams with an international team of trained experts.

The conversations will last approximately half an hour and will then be considered for acquisition.

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