IMAGINE
a community arts-based initiative on how we care and want to be cared for facing change, grief, and loss.
Affiliation
About the research project
How do you want to be cared for鈥攁nd care for yourself鈥攊n the face of change, grief, and loss?
This personal question is at the heart of听IMAGINE, a community arts-based initiative at the Faculty of Fine Art, Music and Design, University of Bergen.
Talking about death, loss, and grief can bring up strong feelings and memories. It can remind us how we have grieved, the support we鈥檝e received, and how we鈥檝e learned to live with and share these experiences, of how we have cared for ourselves and others.
滨苍听IMAGINE, we explore these topics in workshops with small groups that usually last half a day, including breaks. The workshops are led by Professor Wolfgang Schmid and Dr. Maren Metell from the Grieg Academy at University of Bergen. They combine creative activities with open conversations. Participants are invited to engage with different forms of arts materials鈥攄raw, make music, tell stories, or write poetry鈥攁nd express their thoughts and feelings about care, both for themselves and for others.
Arts health-promoting and community-building capacities
A report from the World Health Organization in 2019 showed that the arts can help people deal with illness, injury, and emotional challenges. Art can bring people together, help express difficult emotions, and support healing and recovery. It can also help prevent illness and promote health throughout life.
Considering the value of death and life
In the 2022 Lancets Commission report on听The Value of Death听gathered听a wide range of people from around the world鈥攈ealthcare workers, scientists, philosophers, artists, and community leaders鈥攍ooking at how death and dying are handled in Western societies. The report concludes that the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed how much death and dying are managed by professionals, often separated from everyday community life and knowledge. This became particularly obvious during the pandemic but points to a deeper weakening of traditional, community-based knowledge and practices around dying, death and grief. While modern healthcare was indispensable during the pandemic, the report reminds that professional systems have pushed aside families and communities in end-of-life care. Social support networks have been replaced by specialists and protocols, making death and grief feel unfamiliar and harder to talk about. However, considering the value of death, prompts us to turn to life, rethink how we want to life.
鈥楥are as a commons鈥
IMAGINE听takes up both, arts and communities鈥 power for people鈥檚 health, life and community. It听applies arts-engagement as a practice and a method to co-create spaces for creativity, connection, learning and reflection. IMAGINEworkshops are open to everyone鈥攁cross generations, genders, nationalities, backgrounds, and abilities. It encourages people to embody care beyond medical treatment and standardised routines carried out by professionals in specialized institutions.听
IMAGINE promotes 鈥榗are as a听commons鈥听referring to a form of commitment based on the presence of people; the active, direct, first-person participation of those who share common concerns, interests, and values. The word 鈥榗ommons鈥 is related to 鈥榗ommunity鈥, 鈥榗ommunication鈥, and 鈥榗ommonwealth鈥. Thus, 鈥榗are as commons鈥 expands the realm of care to something we all share, possess, are capable of, and can do!听
Commons are shared spaces, processes, and practices that we build and rebuild together. They challenge care systems that feel rigid, distant, or uncaring, and instead promote ideas that help us build understanding, solidarity across generations, and well-being. How we care, what we care or don鈥檛 care about shows what we value and what kind of world we want to live in together. IMAGINE aims to support inclusive and creative ways of practicing care鈥攕haped by the cultures, values, and everyday lives of the people who take part. The workshop format is flexible and can be adapted to different groups, places, and situations.听
We have conducted workshops at the University of Bergen with groups of healthcare students from different disciplines; with a group of people with developmental disabilities; and with children and their families at the Bergen International Festival. At the festival, we hosted drop-in workshops in a small hut built especially for the event and placed in a pedestrian area in Bergen. Children could simply walk in and take part in drawing, storytelling, and music-making.
Works cited:
Fancourt, D., and Finn, S. (2019). What is the evidence of the role of arts in improving health and well-being. A scoping review. Health Evidence Network Synthesis Report 67. World Health Organization.
Haiven, M. (2014). Crises of imagination, crises of power. Capitalism, creativity and the commons. Zed Books (UK, US, and Worldwide), Fernwood Publishing (Canada).
Halstead, J., and Schmid, W. (2024).听Hearing Loss - Listening to End-of-Life Transitions, an Arts-Based Approach to Midlife Mourning. Age, Culture, Humanities, Vol 7 (2023).听
Sallnow, L., et al (2022)听鈥淩eport of the Lancet Commission on the Value of Death: bringing death back into life.鈥 Lancetvol. 399, 2022, pp. 837-84. Doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)02314-X.
Project activities
Songs travel鈥
鈥o did Jill Halstead and Wolfgang Schmid in April 2026 with the awarded short film听Last(ing) Music - An essay on music therapy at end of life.
Wolfgang and Jill went to Klagenfurt and Troms酶, to disseminate and discuss their research from their projects IMAGINE and 惭耻蝉颈肠4颁丑补苍驳别.听At the Gustav Mahler Private University in Klagenfurt, they showed the film Last(ing) Music as part of their performance-presentation Hearing loss 鈥 doing loss. At TREFF 2026, the Troms酶 Educational Film Festival, the film was screened and awarded by the festival鈥檚 organization committee as their definitive favourite movie from a total of 75 films submitted from 21 countries.
What is a song? What is its power?听 听
Last(ing) Music听explores these听questions听through the story of Kari, a 49-year-old woman receiving听palliative听care, and her听relationship with听the song听The Boy from Ipanema, as sung by Ella Fitzgerald. The film traces Kari鈥檚听experience with this song across a lifespan, revealing how music can remain with us听by carrying memories, emotions, and听a sense of self across time. It also shows how Kari鈥檚 engagement with the song mediates her experience of total pain, a form of existential pain that is at once physiological, emotional, and relational.听
The film has been premiered in May 2024 at the Bergen Festival. Its production is the result of a two-years collaboration between Wolfgang Schmid and Jill Halstead, together with Frode Ims and Lars Olaf Haaheim from Bergen Media City, and Morten Norheim from the Grieg Academy at University of Bergen. Since its premiere in 2024, the film has been shown at the houses of literature in Bergen and Oslo, and at the Grieg International Research School of Interdisciplinary Music Studies in Stavanger in 2024, among others.听Last(ing) Music has shown to be suitable for a public audience and for students in music pedagogy, music therapy, as well as those studying medicine, nursing, psychology, and social sciences. It has been shared with health care professionals at the Palliative Centre Haukeland University Hospital, Haraldsplass Deaconess Hospital, and the Dignity Centre in Bergen. As part of the IMAGINE project, addressing questions of care and self-care in times of loss and grief, the film is regularly included in seminars of TVEPS, an interdisciplinary workplace learning initiative, offering training for students across the faculties of University of Bergen and Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.听
Last(ing) Music journeying to Klagenfurt and Troms酶
In April 2026, Jill and Wolfgang听travelled with the film to two international venues for research dissemination, one in Klagenfurt and one in Troms酶, each characterized by distinct audiences and contexts, as well as differing approaches and purposes. At the Gustav Mahler Private University in Klagenfurt, the film was part of their 90-minutes performance-presentation for 60 international, interdisciplinary students, educators and researchers gathering for an Erasmus+ exchange from seven Universities in Austria, Romania, Bosnia, Serbia, Macedonia, Hungary, and Croatia.听
On Tuesday 14th of April, Jill and Wolfgang presented the film at the Forschungsforum (research forum), a joint event of University of Klagenfurt, Gustav Mahler University of Music, and PH K盲rnten. Jill鈥檚 and Wolfgang鈥檚 performance-presentation builds on a trilogy of creative and research-based works, including the digital arts exposition Anatomy of Loss published in Research Catalogue, the article Hearing Loss 鈥 Listening to End-of-Life Transitions. An arts-based approach to midlife mourning, and the end-of-life case study Last(ing) Music, realised as a film essay.听 Though distinct in form and context, these three formats are interconnected through their shared exploration of music, care, and understanding experiences of loss and end-of-life. With the trilogy, Jill and Wolfgang demonstrate how interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary collaboration can operate in educational and professional contexts, linking artistic research, interprofessional practice, and learning. Each part of the trilogy stands on its own, offering a distinct entry point into the theme, altogether showing how arts-based and collaborative methods can deepen understanding and connection across disciplines.
On Friday, 17th of April, the film was screened at TREFF, the Troms酶 Educational Film Festival.听TREFF is a biennial international event organized by Result, The Resource Centre for Teaching, Learning, and Technology, at University in Troms酶 - The Arctic University of Norway. The target audience are filmmakers, educators, and pedagogues in higher education.听The festival鈥檚 theme is all about moving education,听exploring听film as a pedagogical tool in higher education, featuring screenings, workshops, and discussions. Selected from a total of 75 international films from 21 countries submitted to TREFF in 2026, Last(ing) Music received the TREFF Honorable Mention, awarded by the festival鈥檚 organization committee. The committee reasons their decision by pointing out that 鈥渢he film conveys a powerful story with depth and relevance through simple means. It offers a fantastic example of educators using the power of film as a tool for communication鈥. Wolfgang鈥檚 courage to place themself at the centre of the film telling Kari鈥檚 story, 鈥渂rings authenticity, trust, and a strong human dimension to the learning experience鈥. The organisers further highlight the film鈥檚 careful balance between music, sound, and silence. Two narrators, Jill and Wolfgang, tell Kari鈥檚 story after her death, framing it with reflecting passages from literature. Although Kari is no longer alive, the film renders her vividly present through music and narration, offering a cinematic homage. By combining academic reflection with artistic means and storytelling, the film responds to the questions What is a song? What is its power?听in a poetic and compelling way.听
Moving education 鈥 moving end-of-life care
The two international events differed considerably in audience, context, and modes of dissemination, demonstrating the film鈥檚 versatility and wide applicability. Kari鈥檚 story moves people, independent of their background, age, education, or origin. After the film screening, attendees in both, Klagenfurt and Troms酶, approached Jill and Wolfgang to share their own stories with music at the end of life with a loved one. As such, the film invites for personal reflection and compassion and provides an example for how music connects us throughout life and beyond. Watching the film creates a sense of belonging across space and time, as Sean Street, quoted in the film, articulates it regarding the nature and power of a song:听
鈥淚 listen to a song, bringing my own imagined presence to the place of sonic origin, with its context of time and weather, mood and health, and combined with my own current physical space.听 It is while carrying all these criteria that I listen.听It is both space and time travel.鈥
Last(ing) Music - An essay on music therapy at end of life is available open access on vitentv.no.
It is intended for anyone who is curious about why music means so much in our lives. It is particularly suited for students and professionals in the healthcare and arts fields.
听
Links to projects and initiatives mentioned:
- IMAGINE:听/forskning/forskningsprosjekter/imagine
- Music4Change:听
- TREFF 鈥 Troms酶 Educational Film Festival:听
- TVEPS:听
- Research Catalogue 鈥淎natomy of Loss鈥:听
- Journal article in Age, Culture, Humanities:听
- Vitentv.no:听
Calendar
2026
- 13. april workshop at Gustav Mahler Privat Universit盲t in Klagenfurt (Wolfgang Schmid og Jill Halstead)
- 30. - 31. may drop-in workshops at
2025
- 31. january workshop at L忙rernes dag
- 21. january workshop in collaboration withTVEPS
- 29. may - 2. June drop-in workshop at
2024
- 09. january workshop with Vestlandets Innovasjonsselskap
- 29. may workshop in collaboration with festspillene
- 03. october workshop in collaboration with a researcher from the network for inclusive research at Christieg氓rden
- 28. october dialoge meeting with Verdighetssenteret
- 31. October workshop in collaboration with 听
2023
- 22. september:听IMAGINE - Envisioning care at the end of life
Project group
Wolfgang Schmid (Grieg Academy, 黑料吃瓜资源)
Maren Metell (Grieg Academy, 黑料吃瓜资源)
Tia DeNora (University of Exeter)
Jill Halstead (Grieg Academy, 黑料吃瓜资源)
J茅rome Picard (KMD, 黑料吃瓜资源)
Thomas De Ridder (KMD, 黑料吃瓜资源)
Links
From blog:
From blog:
People
Project manager
Wolfgang Schmid Porsjektleder
Project members
Maren Metell prosjektmedarbeider