Being Heard: Empathetic Artistic Interpretations of Young People Living with Serious Medical Conditions

Being Heard: Empathetic Artistic Interpretations of Young People Living with Serious Medical Conditions

Content type: Health story

The “Being Heard” project explores how artists can help young adults with serious medical conditions feel understood and cared for.  Young adults worked with a team that included a nurse researcher from The Institute for Integrative Health, an art therapist/social worker, and two professional artists.  Each child wrote an “I Am From” poem and then participated in an interview with an artist, who created a painting and accompanying narrative based on what they heard. The nurse researcher and art therapist then shared the painting with the child, asked for their thoughts and feelings, and offered an opportunity for the child to create a watercolor print.

The exhibition at the Children’s National Medical Center included eight paintings by patients between the ages of 10 and 19; the booklet from the show also includes the art work, poems and children’s responses.

The Washington Post ran a story on this project, available at this link.

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Children’s art as visual narrative

Children’s art as visual narrative

Content type: Health story

This article about visual narrative highlights the effectiveness of non-verbal expressive arts like drawing, painting, and constructing as therapeutic and restorative experiences. Trauma survivors, including children, may find it challenging to articulate their experiences verbally, as trauma can impact the brain’s language centers. The article contrasts previous approaches that encouraged forgetting traumatic events with the current understanding of the importance of acknowledging, validating, and providing mental health intervention for survivors, allowing them to tell their stories through creative acts. The article references the project “Forced to Flee: Visual Stories of Refugee Youth from Burma,” which compiles a book of art expressions by young refugees (a page for the kickstarter campaign for the project was available as of 12/20/23 at this link). The project showcases how visual narratives, conveyed through art, can tell powerful stories, open hearts, and build bridges of understanding. By honoring the visual narratives of youth, the project not only raises awareness about human rights issues but also offers a glimpse into possibilities for reparation and redemption for young survivors.

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Visual and narrative comprehension of trauma

Visual and narrative comprehension of trauma

Content type: Health story

This article argues that though art is assumed to be useful as an intuitive means of representation, its usefulness in offering insight into trauma depends on accompanying narratives. Four artists’ works considered herein illuminate how the synergistic interplay between art and expository input from personal narratives can augment comprehension of trauma”. This article includes artwork from  Luzene Hill, David Wojnarowicz, Tania Love Abramson. Luzene Hill’s work, Retracing the Trace, depicts their experience with rape and the silencing of women within our society. The art installment shows her body lying on the ground with blood red knots scattered around her body. This article could be used in a class discussion based on how trauma can be made tangible and expressed through mediums such as art. 



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Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate situations, flawed coping mechanisms, mayhem, and other things that happened.

Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate situations, flawed coping mechanisms, mayhem, and other things that happened.

Content type: Health story

This is a graphic memoir written by a comedic blogger, divided into chapters that retell various life experiences in words and digital drawings, ranging from sibling relationships to unruly dogs to childhood memories to unconventional methods of dealing with depression. Brosh has experienced depression throughout her life, and this is a topic she digs into candidly in her book.

Selected chapters of this book could be used as brief, accessible readings in a class on mental illness or in a training for health care providers. A follow up assignment could invite students to make graphic narratives of their own and could invite discussion of how humor can be used to make difficult topics less taboo.

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