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Revisit Brain Tumour Book - Artist Leah Jensen’s Journey Through Cancer Diagnosis to Treatment: Curated by Cavaliero Finn

Past exhibition
17 - 26 April 2026
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Overview
Revisit Brain Tumour Book - Artist Leah Jensen’s Journey Through Cancer Diagnosis to Treatment, Curated by Cavaliero Finn
In April 2026, Cavaliero Finn presented, "Brain Tumour Book", a charity fundraising exhibition of artwork by Leah Jensen at the Fitzrovia Chapel in London. The exhibition featured artwork that chronicled the artist's journey through her recent brain cancer diagnosis and treatment.
 
Through intricate embroidered stitch-work and layered imagery, Leah transformed her vulnerability into visual poetry, offering visitors to the exhibition a window into her process of fear, resilience, acceptance, and hope. 
 
In September 2020 Leah was unable to focus and lost her ability to speak at work. She was rushed to hospital where they discovered an aggressive brain tumour.
 
During her long stay in hospital, Leah faced her fears and started to reflect on life and death. Being largely bedridden, she was unable to work with clay, a medium for which she is critically acclaimed. Instead, she turned to embroidery, or drawing with thread, to help her process the complex emotions she was experiencing.
 
Like Louise Bourgeois and Tracey Emin, Leah reveals her darkest and lightest moments through her work with humour, sensitivity and an inspiring philosophical approach.
 
Every emotion, thought, memory and feeling has been captured in her deeply personal Brain Tumour Book that is still ongoing, as she deals with a potentially uncertain future. Each check-up and brain scan she goes for brings a sense of dread but Leah has such a calm sense of acceptance and positivity that shines through her work which articulates the ups and downs of her life-changing diagnosis.
 
Here are some of the pages from Leah's Brain Tumour Book as featured in the exhibition.
 
Over the past year, while researching this project, we've been struck by a stark reality: brain tumours kill more children and adults under 40 than any other cancer in the UK, yet it receives just 3% of national cancer research funding.
 
It is for this reason that we are raising money for The Brain Tumour Charity for this show and any future tours of the exhibition. The Brain Tumour Charity is the world's leading brain tumour charity and the largest dedicated funder of research into the disease. Their work spans pioneering research, awareness of symptoms, and critical support for those affected.
 

How you can help

We have produced a limited edition print of Comfort/Confinement, one of the pages from Leah's book, and Leah has created a series of hand embroidered handkerchiefs, both of which are available for sale as part of the exhibition with net profits going directly to the Brain Tumour Charity.  

 

You can also donate to our crowdfunder using the link below. We would ideally like to take the exhibition on tour around the UK to give everyone the chance to see it. If you're able to support, we would be hugely grateful for any donation, no matter the size. Every contribution goes towards this project and supports the life-saving research carried out by The Brain Tumour Charity.

 

 

DONATE HERE TO RAISE FUNDS for THIS CHARITABLE EXHIBITION AND for THE BRAIN TUMOUR CHARITY

 
As part of the Brain Tumour Book Leah also developed a series of quilts and an embroidered pillow both of which were made especially for the exhibition. 
 

Also on show were three of Leah's intricately hand carved porcelain vessels, for which she has received wide acclaim. These three pots; the mystery pot, a large carved vessel that she had no memory of making, the last pot Leah made before her brain surgery and the first pot she made after her brain surgery, play their very own important part in Leah's story.

​
Undergoing intensive treatments to the brain can result in a range of strange symptoms, including memory loss. Although it is certain that the mystery pot was made by Leah, she has no recollection of making it, or even where it was made. She was unable to find any evidence of the making process that is usually well documented. Alongside Leah's signature at the base is the clue 'St. Catherine', even so she is unable to identify which painting was used to inform the carving.

 

To this day she does not remember, she believes this is the best pot she is ever made.

 

The Last Pot was built and carved in 2020 as Leah waited for a craniotomy to remove her brain tumour. This procedure held a risk of paralysis, while carving she wondered if this would be the last pot she would ever make.

It remains forever unfinished as she ran out of time before the operation date arrived. The pot stayed unfired for the three years she spent in treatment and recovery and during this time it was carefully transported through two house moves. Areas of the carving were damaged by the moving and damp conditions of the flats in which Leah lived.​ When she was able to move back into a studio, finally it was fired. She did not imagine that it would survive due to all the upheaval, but it did with the damage preserved.​

 

The First Pot Leah made after her cancer treatment, felt and still feels for her like a monumental achievement. The recovery after treatment and trying to get her life back on track was the hardest part for Leah. She had to come to terms with the challenges of having a brain injury and fatigue, and dealing with the emotional turmoil she found herself in with memory loss and intense confusion.

 

On seeing this exhibition, many visitors left in absolute awe of this incredible artist's bravery, perseverance and skill.

 

Here are some of the visitors comments after seeing the show.

John Williams - curator V&A
"Don't miss: Extraordinary work by ceramicist Leah Jensen responding to her brain tumour diagnosis and treatment through the powerful medium of stitching (and a wonderful short film). Have not seen an exhibition quite like it."

 

Tabish Khan - London art critic
"One of the most moving exhibitions I've seen of work by Leah Jensen with Cavaliero Finn at Fitzrovia Chapel. The exhibition features artwork that chronicles the artist's journey through her recent brain tumour diagnosis and treatment, and it's an emotional ride that brought tears to my eyes."

 

 
Paul Lee - Partner at Deloitte UK
"If you're in central London, you should pop in to the Fitzrovia Chapel, near Mortimer Street, on the site of the former Middlesex Hospital. You will find a couple of gems: the building, which is stunning, and secondly the exhibition. The subject of the show is ostensibly a brain tumour, but in reality it has so many facets. It is about endurance, creativity and love. It is about health, relationships, and misinformation on the Internet. It is about comfort in creating at the harshest of times. The artist Leah Jansen whose experience with brain cancer is narrated via her artwork is so talented, for her ceramics, her textiles and for her words. The exhibition has been curated by the ever astute Debra Finn and Juliana Cavaliero which is why you will remember this. And you can also mull also about the power of human creativity, and how none of what Leah does could be replicated by LLM, and the same applies to the inside of the building."
 
Natalie Melton - Executive Director Crafts Council 
"Lovingly presented by Cavaliero Finn, the exhibition showcases the extraordinary creative output that sustained Leah whilst dealing with a brain tumour diagnosis and subsequent treatment during Covid. Leah's skill - given that stitch is not her primary medium, is astonishing, and her honesty is powerful. Run to see this brilliant show, and donate, if you can, to support the Brain Tumour Charity."
 
 
Leah's Film
Cavaliero Finn produced a film for the exhibition that recounts Leah's experiences throughout her diagnosis and treatment. The film was made in conjunction with Leah and Elastic Pie Films  which was also on show at the exhibition.  You can watch this incredibly moving film online now, simply scroll down or click the video link in the header of this exhibition page.  We are immensely grateful to Elastic Pie Films and to Leah for making this film, it truly is a work of art.
 
Thank you for taking the time to read about this exhibition, we understand that times are tough for a lot of people so if you can't donate you can still help to support this project by sharing this exhibition page or the crowdfunder link above, it all helps.  
 
 
Download Press Release
Download List of Works
Installation Views
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Works
  • Leah Jensen, Your Body Will Betray You , 2026
    Leah Jensen, Your Body Will Betray You , 2026
    £ 7,000.00
  • Leah Jensen, Comfort/Confinement, 2026
    Leah Jensen, Comfort/Confinement, 2026
    £ 250.00
  • Leah Jensen, Boredom is a Gift, 2026
    Leah Jensen, Boredom is a Gift, 2026 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, When the algorithm discovers that you have cancer, 2026
    Leah Jensen, When the algorithm discovers that you have cancer, 2026
    £ 7,000.00
  • Leah Jensen, That Morning 3, 2026
    Leah Jensen, That Morning 3, 2026
    £ 3,800.00
  • Leah Jensen, Small Quilt - Is a chemo body a safe place to grow a child?, 2026
    Leah Jensen, Small Quilt - Is a chemo body a safe place to grow a child?, 2026
    £ 7,000.00
  • Leah Jensen, Comfort/Confinement, 2026
    Leah Jensen, Comfort/Confinement, 2026 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, The Things You Can't Say Out Loud, 2026
    Leah Jensen, The Things You Can't Say Out Loud, 2026 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, The Things You Can't Say Out Loud I, 2026
    Leah Jensen, The Things You Can't Say Out Loud I, 2026 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, Without you I'm sure I would have died, 2026
    Leah Jensen, Without you I'm sure I would have died, 2026 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, Boredom is a Gift I, 2026
    Leah Jensen, Boredom is a Gift I, 2026 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, The Last Pot (Saint Sebastian), 2020
    Leah Jensen, The Last Pot (Saint Sebastian), 2020 Sold
  • Leah Jensen, The Mystery Pot, 2019 or 2020
    Leah Jensen, The Mystery Pot, 2019 or 2020 Sold
Press
  • Sewing as emotional repair with Leah Jensen

    Grant Gibson, Material Matters Podcast, May 7, 2026
  • Last chance to see the most moving exhibition in London

    Tabish Khan, The Londonist , April 24, 2026
  • 'I forgot how to talk and was diagnosed with Grade 3 brain cancer'

    Leah Jensen, 35, had been suffering with headaches and a bad memory for years, but she dismissed her symptoms as tiredness - until she suddenly lost the ability to speak during a London bar shift
    Neil Shaw and John Bett, The Mirror, March 8, 2026
Video
Related content
  • Sewing as emotional repair with Leah Jensen Press

    Sewing as emotional repair with Leah Jensen

    Material Matters Podcast May 7, 2026
    Leah Jensen made her name as a ceramic artist, creating vessels with extraordinarily detailed, geometric surface finishes. In 2020 though, her life took a turn...
    Read more
  • Last chance to see the most moving exhibition in London Press

    Last chance to see the most moving exhibition in London

    The Londonist Apr 24, 2026
    I see a lot of exhibitions, and it’s rare to find one that moves me to tears. Yet, that’s exactly what happened at Leah Jensen’s...
    Read more
  • 'I forgot how to talk and was diagnosed with Grade 3 brain cancer' Press

    'I forgot how to talk and was diagnosed with Grade 3 brain cancer'

    The Mirror Mar 8, 2026
    A gifted artist found out she was battling brain cancer after suddenly losing the ability to speak. Leah Jensen, 35, had endured headaches and memory...
    Read more

Related artist

  • Leah Jensen

    Leah Jensen

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