13:00
Thursday
Apr 24
13:00
15:00
16:00
17:00
19:30
Friday
Apr 25
17:30
Monday
Apr 28
13:00
16:00
Tuesday
Apr 29
14:00
16:00
16:15
16:30
17:30
Wednesday
Apr 30
14:30
15:00
16:00
17:00
18:00
18:15
18:30
Thursday
May 1
10:00
14:00
14:45
15:00
16:00
18:00
17:30
Friday
May 2
14:30
16:00
16:30
18:00
Saturday
May 3
14:00
Tuesday
May 6
10:00
13:00
13:30
15:00
16:00
17:30
18:00
17:00
18:30
Wednesday
May 7
12:00
13:00
13:30
16:00
16:30
16:45
18:00
17:30
Thursday
May 8
13:00
15:30
14:45
16:00
16:15
16:30
17:30
Friday
May 9
15:00
16:30
18:00
18:30
19:00
Saturday
May 10
09:30
Monday
May 12
13:00
16:00
18:00
17:30
Tuesday
May 13
09:00
11:00
13:00
14:00
17:00
16:30
18:00
17:00
17:30
19:30
Wednesday
May 14
11:00
13:00
12:00
13:30
16:30
18:00
17:00
18:30
17:30
Thursday
May 15
08:30
09:00
14:45
15:00
16:00
19:30
Friday
May 16
16:30
18:00
Monday
May 19
17:30
Tuesday
May 20
14:45
18:00
17:00
17:30
19:30
Wednesday
May 21
09:00
13:30
16:30
18:00
17:30
Thursday
May 22
15:00
16:30
18:00
Friday
May 23
16:30
Tuesday
May 27
16:00
16:15
Wednesday
May 28
16:30
18:30
Thursday
May 29
12:00
15:00
17:30
18:00
17:30
Friday
May 30
09:00
17:00
16:30
Monday
Jun 2
17:30
Tuesday
Jun 3
18:00
Wednesday
Jun 4
13:30
18:00
Thursday
Jun 5
09:00
15:15
15:30
18:00
Friday
Jun 6
16:30
Monday
Jun 9
16:30
18:00
Tuesday
Jun 10
14:00
16:00
15:30
18:00
Wednesday
Jun 11
16:00
16:30
18:00
17:00
Thursday
Jun 12
18:00
Friday
Jun 13
16:30
Monday
Jun 16
17:15
Tuesday
Jun 17
10:30
14:00
Thursday
Jun 19
08:30
15:00
19:30
20:00
Friday
Jun 20
09:00
Saturday
Jun 21
10:00
14:00
Wednesday
Jun 25
13:00
Thursday
Jun 26
09:00
19:00
Wednesday
Jul 2
16:30
Friday
Jul 4
17:00
Tuesday
Jul 8
19:30
Wednesday
Jul 9
08:30
Thursday
Aug 14
09:00
Friday
Oct 17
16:00
Oxford University
May 2
Quite often, I am asked why I chose to be a cardiologist. At one level, the answer is easy. Aged 14, I was drawn to the heart through the simple conviction that it is the ‘the most important bit’. Decades later, I have been a doctor for over 30 years, am a practising cardiologist and professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Oxford, where my laboratory works to understand the cellular and molecular mechanisms of heart injury and repair. Over the years, I have come to realise that I am far from alone in my sense of the pre-eminence of the heart. It is a notion that has persisted for millennia. The Beating Heart is a cultural detective trail to try to understand how and why we have come to see the heart as we do. It is a story of the heart, and in some sense a cultural history told through depiction of the heart. The story uncovers beautiful heart images that illuminate the age-old dance between art, religion, philosophy and ‘scientific’ thinking. Across time, we meet saints, artists, lovers, scholars and eventually scientists who unwittingly influence each other, in approaching and building an understanding of the beating heart. The talk will be an exploration of this story told through images. Think 'Botticelli to Banksy'.