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A House With Two Rooms

Though they share a home, Marie Louise Muir often feels excluded from her autistic daughter’s world. Can the arts help her to enter and understand?

A House With Two Rooms

Marie Louise Muir set out to explore the world her 15 year old daughter Catherine daughter inhabits and asks whether the arts can help provide access and insight into the autism spectrum.
Marie Louise doesn’t want to β€˜fix’ Catherine, she doesn’t feel there’s anything wrong with her. She would just like to understand her a little better.
β€œAlthough we are so close and live in the same house, we experience the world differently. It’s a bit like living in a house with two rooms, and I’d like to know what it’s like in her room”
Inspired by an innovative, immersive theatre experience called Reassembled Slightly Askew, which was based on the artist Shannon Sickels’ experience of a serious brain infection, Marie Louise and Catherine wonder if they can use immersive sound technologies to give audiences a better understanding of autism.
Through a series of intimate conversations, they explore the different ways they view the world around them, discuss the art that has helped bridge the gap between them, and consider the potential for creativity to give neurotypical people a better understanding of the spectrum.
Marie Louise also talks to author Vicky Martin who wrote β€œM in the Middle” with the girls of Limpsfield Grange, a school for girls on the high functioning end of the autism spectrum - a novel which had a huge impact on both Catherine and Marie-Louise.
She meets The AutistiX, a rock band featuring three musicians on the spectrum, and joins Catherine at a physical theatre class called Kids in Control to explore the different ways that creativity and the arts can help us all feel more connected to each other.

Available now

24 minutes

Last on

Wed 15 Jan 2020 18:05

Broadcasts

  • Sat 11 Jan 2020 12:05
  • Wed 15 Jan 2020 18:05

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