This exhibition of new work by photographer Judie Waldmann at the Jacqueline du Pr Music Building is a logical progression from her earlier projects in which she has investigated the lives and perspectives of people living on the edges of society. Her present work deals with the particularly prevalent yet uncomfortable subject of dementia and other conditions related to memory loss. With the co-operation of Specal (Specialised Early Care for Alzheimer's) and the Clive Project (help for those with the early onset of dementia) Judie Waldmann spent considerable time with people struggling with memory loss, working with them and helping them to record through photography their narrowing world.

The result is an exhibition that is a sensitive and elucidating insight into the existence of those who are slowly losing the connecting threads of their life. Through a combination of her own photographs, video, installation and photographs taken by others with her help and co-operation, Waldmann has built up an exhibition that illustrates not just the gradual dissolving of awareness but also the hope and optimism that can exist for those suffering from a condition that we fear.

The exhibition has a number of visual facets, including a four-panel display showing the gradual falling away of awareness, a handmade book containing images with comments by the individuals involved, an installation and a large poster which has been cut so that it is gradually dissolving into narrow featureless strips mirroring the stripping away of memory and identity. The installation, a glass-fronted cabinet containing sand-blasted glass boxes made in co-operation with artist Clare Sadler, is a very poignant metaphor for the struggle with dementia. This is a luminous exhibition in a beautiful venue that shows how, with care and understanding, there can be positive moments even under the most daunting circumstances.