Art, Imagination and Public Service

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Product details

  • ISBN 9781913368180
  • Dimensions: 110 x 178mm
  • Publication Date: 17 May 2021
  • Publisher: Haus Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Art, Imagination and Public Service consists of three dialogues between a President of the Supreme Court and a painter (Hughie O'Donoghue and Brenda Hale); between a Permanent Secretary and a musician (James O'Donnell and Clare Moriarty); and between a Secretary of State and a poet (Micheal O'Siadhail and David Blunkett). Together they seek to explore how art and imagination can feed public servants to enable them to find new ways of addressing the intractable problems facing government, parliament and the law, and resist utilitarian responses where people end up being treated only as numbers in a target-driven world. In the dialogues the speakers discover surprising synergies in their respective approaches to their work. The conversations offer a unique way into thinking about imaginative, compassionate and intelligent public service. The book is intended to inspire public servants of all kinds to reconnect fearlessly with their fundamental humanity.

DAVID BLUNKETT is a former Education and Employment Secretary and Home Secretary in Tony Blair’s Cabinet. He was an MP from 1987 until 2015, when he entered the House of Lords. He is currently Professor of Politics in Practice at the University of Sheffield.

MICHEAL O’SIADHAIL is a poet. His Collected Poems was published in 2013, One Crimson Thread in 2015, and The Five Quintets in 2018. He was awarded an Irish American Cultural Institute prize for poetry (1982) and the Marten Toonder prize for Literature (1998). The Five Quintets was named the Conference of Christianity and Literature Book of the Year (2018) and received an Eric Hoffer Award (2020).

BRENDA HALE retired as President of the Supreme Court of the UK in January 2020, after 26 years as a full-time judge in the High Court, Court of Appeal, House of Lords, and Supreme Court. Before that, she was an academic at Manchester University and then a Law Commissioner, specialising in family, welfare, and equality law.

HUGHIE O’DONOGHUE is a painter born in Manchester with an MA in Fine Arts from Goldsmiths College, London. He was elected a Royal Academician in 2009. His major public commissions include stained glass winders for The Lady Chapel in Westminster Abbey and a painting, St Martin Divides his Cloak, for the Imperial Society of Knights Bachelor chapel in St Paul’s Cathedral. He has been the subject of solo exhibitions at venues including Haus de Kunst in Munich, the Imperial War Museum in London, and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin

CLARE MORIARTY was a civil servant for nearly thirty-five years, latterly as Permanent Secretary of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and of the Department for the Exiting the EU. She promotes people-centred leadership with an emphasis on diversity and inclusion, and speaks regularly about the importance of valuing emotion and creating space for difference.

JAMES O’DONNELL was appointed Organist and Master of the Choristers at Westminster Abbey in 2000. He read for a degree in Music at Jesus College, Cambridge, where he was an organ scholar and is now an Honorary Fellow. He was Master of Music at Westminster Cathedral from 1988 to 1999, and has also served as an Organ professor at the Royal Academy of Music and President of the Royal College of Organists.