Perceptive portraits capture how to age well

An exhibition of vibrant portraits is set to honour a remarkable group of older people credited with altering our understanding of ageing.

The portraits – painted by renowned artist Fionna Carlisle – capture the personalities behind the Lothian Birth Cohorts (LBCs), some of the most-intensively studied research participants in the world.

Remarkable group

The LBCs are a unique group of people – now in their 80s and 90s – who sat intelligence tests as 11-year olds.

Since 1999 they have taken part in thinking tests, brain scans, and health and lifestyle assessments, transforming our understanding of how early life influences healthy ageing.

The Art of Intelligent Ageing: Portraits of the Lothian Birth Cohorts 

10am - 4pm, Monday to Saturday

27 October until 24 November 2018

Edinburgh College of Art Fire Station 

Engaging exhibition

Included in the exhibition is her new portrait of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Professor Peter Higgs – who took part in a previous study of healthy ageing at the University.

More than one billion data points have been collected for each of the LBCs’ members. These have revealed that both genetics and lifestyle factors contribute to healthy ageing.

Ms Carlisle depicts the LBC members with graphic, bold brushstrokes. She has painted prominent figures in Scotland, including former First Minister Alex Salmond – which hangs in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery – and the late former Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, which is part of the House of Commons Art Collection.

Fascinating insights 

The paintings will be shown alongside scientific treasures from the study participants, including a 3D-printed brain and a highly-detailed crystal etching of the brain’s wiring from one of the participants.

The exhibition has been curated by former Keeper of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Dr Duncan Thomson. 

The Lothian Birth Cohorts have encouraged my scientific team to scour their minds, bodies, and histories to build rich and valuable accounts of their negotiating the ‘whips and scorns of time’. Fionna’s beautiful portraits weave the life story of each individual into the painting.

Professor Ian Deary
Director of the Lothian Birth Cohorts and the University’s Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology

Wick-born artist Fionna Carlisle studied at Edinburgh College of Art and has exhibited her work across the world, including New York, Chicago, Moscow and Paris. 

These portraits were painted over seven years and reflect the relationship that I built up with the sitters over this time. With these paintings I wanted to filter age and show the youth and spirit of the older sitters as people who have real bodies and limbs, spirit and life.

Fionna Carlisle
Artist

Related links

The Lothian Birth Cohorts

Further information on the artist and previous exhibitions 

Listen to a podcast with the project's artist and researcher