Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

QUEER, ILL & OKAY

Review by Sean Margaret Wagner

When Joseph Varisco, the creator and emcee behind ‘Queer, Ill, and Okay‘ took the stage, he explained that this evening of LGBTQ and Illness focused night of performance art was brought about by his inability to feel connected to similar queer-focused Chicago performance. Appropriately, there were no strangers in the packed DfbrL8r Gallery, and anyone with the mistaken impression that they were not somehow connected to the action unfolding in front of them need only see our host Varisco to be tapped to operate a light fixture or hold a corner of a draping black silk.

The majority of the audience for QIO are already performers, artists and die-hard fans, embracing the steamy climate and seated well past capacity in every inch of floor space they can grab, prepared for the sort of art that can change shape and texture depending on their response. They’ve come to take part in something nervy and honest, that welcomes all but defies us to hold it in judgment (and is especially impossible to review). Varisco’s artist collective have opened up their wounds so that we can view them in cross-section, sometimes laughing, sometimes in pain and sometimes with a finger pointed squarely at all of us. For some performers, the sentiment goes beyond words; they dance, falter and yowl when they can do nothing else. The sole character that never escapes the stage is illness, and each artist gives shape and from to their personal demon, whatever it may be.

Tim’m West helps us absorb the candidness and bitterness of his daily HIV treatment tedium by coating his story in the sugar of his music and poetry, with a special testament to anyone who has ever felt maligned by the dagger of biased internet dating profiles insisting prospects ‘must be disease free’. Chris Knowlton draws us (quite literally) through the labyrinthine medical maze of sperm donation and a cancer treatment program simply not built to accommodate a man of his sexuality.

Not wanting to give her illness any airtime, Mary Fons dispenses with the spoken word. Instead she provides her own snide subtitles that belie a deep love and emotional debt she owes to her sisters, who battled her illness, too. She celebrates them (and all caretakers) with music and “borrowed” wine. Emerging from under a smooth black fabric, Cruel Valentine pushes its limits and fights her way out of its confines to be birthed proudly into the world, draped in the fabric she departed. If she hasn’t escaped her prison, she has at least mastered it, and found a way to hold her own.

Dirty Grits places his illnesses and neuroses in the seat of a chair and speaks to them as if they were an old friend (‘remember when we tried to go to church?’ ‘remember when we alienated everyone?’), and demands answers from his audience, asking why we looked away when he’d reached his lowest point and holding us accountable. From beside a pile of laundry, Patrick Gill recounts the charming denial that allowed him and his family to gloss over his ever worsening health concerns, and how the minutiae of a pile of dirty clothes allowed him some ill-advised distance from the disease which almost took his foot.
Hovering over a bucket of ice water, NIC Kay silently reacts as an overhead voice singing Des’Ree’s ‘You Gotta Be’ changes from confident and in-tune to dissonant and fraught with audio feedback. NIC responds to the feedback by burying their head into the ice until the sweet music returns. Sara K. becomes the members of her immediate family in living documentary, as each loved one recounts their experience of a particularly grim episode for Sara herself. Each of them comes alive, holding themselves, sitting and addressing the documentarians’ camera a little bit differently as they look back on the day their world became different.

QIO is a special, almost untouchable sort of performance arena because in every avenue, it succeeds. Each artist wields their story like a brand new theatrical weapon, and is a master of their own, unteachable art, laid out for our appreciation. Varisco has ensured this concept has such draw for artists on the outside and the outsider that exists in each of us can’t wait to return for future performances and see who the audience encompasses next.

The Show: Queer, Ill and Okay (Conceived by Joseph Varisco & JRV MAJESTY)
Venue: DfbrL8r Art Gallery

Website: http://www.jrvmajesty.com/

You can find Sean Margaret on Twitter: @SMargaretWagner
Read More at Sporkability

Art exhibit highlights work by students with disabilities, learning difficulties (video, photo gallery)

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio –- Local students with disabilities and learning difficulties will showcase their artistic talents during a public art exhibit.

The Exceptional Arts Exhibition will be on display May 22-31 at the Heights Libraries main branch, 2345 Lee Road

"A lot of the art is beautiful. It's awe-inspiring," said Lisa Hunt, of Reaching Heights, the nonprofit agency the organized the event. "It's about celebrating the beauty and the uniqueness of your child."
Glenn Odenbrett's daughter's work will be among the more than 40 pieces featured in the exhibit.
"She's very passionate about art and I'm very proud of her," Odenbrett said about his daughter, who is a high school senior. "It's great that Reaching Heights is partnering with the school district to feature students who may not have a chance to be featured in other ways."

"We need to change the negative narrative and stigma often surrounding learning differences and disabilities," Hunt said. "It is about tolerance and it is about understanding a different way of life."Hunt, who also is the parent of one of the approximately 18 percent of CH-UH students with special needs, said the exhibit was her idea.

She said a lot of resources and support groups for parents of children with disabilities focus on what the children can't do. But this exhibit highlights what they can.
"We're shining a light on these children and giving them the opportunity with their parents to celebrate a can-do spirit around the arts," Hunt said. "If we can learn to support our children and celebrate their uniqueness, I think they will have a lot more opportunities open to them. We have to support who we are, however different that may be."

Marilyn Hershman, who has a fourth-grade son with a learning disability, said the exhibit is great for the students.

"For a lot of these kids with learning differences and disabilities, art is their thing, because anybody can do art. You can take a wheelchair and drive it through some paint and that's art," she said. "This is about these kids just having their day and celebrating them."

The artists and their art teachers will co-host an opening reception from 4-7:30 pm. May 22. There will be refreshments and the Cleveland Heights High Lady Barber Shoppers will perform. The event is free and open to the public.

Read more at Cleveland 

http://www.cleveland.com/cleveland-heights/index.ssf/2014/05/art_exhibit_highlights_work_by.html

A Primal Look at Art Therapy

A few years ago as I was beginning to get a vision for what would become The Primal Connection, I was exploring the idea of vitality from new angles. I was interested in what lay beyond the basics for human survival: nutritionmovement and fitnesssleepstress and sun. I wanted to examine the connections between our hunter-gatherer ancestors’ lifestyles (what we can reasonably determine and presume) and the existing (if somewhat marginal) activities and therapies that appeared to show therapeutic benefit in scientific studies. I talked about bibliotherapywriting therapymusic therapy as well as other more enigmatic but relevant topics like silencesolituderitual and retreat. What could be gleaned from the research (and a bit of Primal philosophizing) for further refining the good life – the deeper sense of well-being that accesses and actualizes the many facets of our evolutionarily fashioned humanity? In the midst of my recent blogging forays into vegetable recommendationsgentle cookingpollution mitigation and resistant starch, I’ve been thinking lately about those past explorations. Truth be told, looking into those areas influenced my life at the time. I’m one to write about what I live – or at very least try what I write about….
Recently, another one of those intriguing intersections between evolutionary activity and modern creative therapy has been on my mind. It’s one of those situations where you encounter something and suddenly you keep running into it. A friend’s mother is in hospice care and has her best days during the art therapist’s visits. A work associate talked about doing art therapy before the birth of her second child to release lingering tension from a traumatic first childbirth. Another friend’s child does art therapy in counseling sessions around family transition. I run into articles about art therapy for recent combat veterans and for women with breast cancer. It makes me stop and wonder. What is it about art that gets to the depths of our experience – often when other “normal” approaches fail? And what does (or should) this mean for everyday Primal life?


Read the full article at Marks Daily Apple


(http://www.marksdailyapple.com/art-therapy/#ixzz2tufO5qV6)

The value of art therapy for those on the autism spectrum


by Kate Lacour, ATR-BC

Autism rates are on the rise, and new treatments, such as art therapy, are emerging to meet the pervasive challenges it presents. Many parents look to art to help their child.

In recent years, autism has been featured frequently in the news, and it seems that everyone knows someone whose life has been touched by the condition. What is autism and how is it treated? Autism is a neurological condition present at birth, whose precise cause is as yet unknown. The symptoms of autism include repetitive or compulsive behaviors, social impairment, problems with communication and trouble processing sensory information (such as hypersensitivity to sounds). The most popular treatment is behavior modification therapy, which aims at shaping behaviors through a system of rewards and consequences. In recent years, caregivers seeking alternative or complimentary treatments have a broader range of options available. One such treatment is art therapy.

Broadly speaking, art therapy promotes mental and emotional growth through art making. Unlike art instruction, art therapy is conducted with the aim of building life skills, addressing deficits and problem behaviors, and promoting healthy self-expression. Clients are encouraged to explore and express themselves using art materials; crafting attractive artwork is not the goal (though it may be a happy by-product).

Read the full article at the Art Of Autism 

(http://the-art-of-autism.com/the-value-of-art-therapy-for-those-on-the-autism-spectrum/)

Welcoming Art Lovers With Disabilities




ON a recent Friday night, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York held its first public exhibition of original art made in its “Seeing Through Drawing” classes. Participants — all blind or partly sighted — created works inspired by objects in the museum’s collection that were described to them by sighted instructors and that they were also allowed to touch.

In another gallery, a tour in American Sign Language was followed by a reception for deaf visitors. And on select Fridays, new “multisensory stations” invite all guests — including those with a range of disabilities — to experience exhibits though scent, touch, music and verbal imaging, or describing things for people with vision impairment.
“The Met has a long history of accessibility for people with disabilities,” said Rebecca McGinnis, who oversees access and community programs. As early as 1908, the museum provided a “rolling chair” for people with mobility issues, and in 1913 held talks for blind public school children, she said. Today, there are programs for people with disabilities nearly every day...

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/arts/artsspecial/welcoming-art-lovers-with-disabilities.html?_r=1&

Deaf and blind artist wins award


Minerva Hussain with his award-winning work.Minerva Hussain with his award-winning work.
  • Minerva Hussain with his award-winning work.
  • A close-up shot of the detail Minerva put into his Chester Zoo piece with the monorail, safari truck and a host of animals cheekily peeping from behind the shrubs and trees in their enclosures.
  • Minerva created this textured representation of Tutankhamun when studying at Mid Cheshire College.


A DEAF artist has been commended for his intricate work based on Chester Zoo – made all the more remarkable because he has been blind since he was a teenager.
Minerva Hussain has Usher syndrome, which started to affect his sight when he was 18, gradually getting worse until he was left with just peripheral vision.
But the 44-year-old uses photographs, a magnifying glass and his memory to create vivid, incredibly detailed and tactile work that the viewer can see with their fingers as well as their eyes.
His Chester Zoo collage is full of different animals hiding and peeping from behind thick paper foliage and stiff cardboard fences, the enclosures are covered in glassy plastic, and he has included safari trucks, a ticket office and the zoo’s much-loved monorail.
“It was hard work, especially with my sight, to do everything myself,” he said.
“I cut out everything – there was a lot of sweat involved when I was sat down cutting things out and I had to make sure there was plenty of light so I could see everything.
“It took five weeks to do.”
Read the full article and view the video at Northwich Guardian 

Artists 'better protected' against dementia, study finds


Music and art are less vulnerable to cognitive decline, Canadian neurologists say

Posted: Aug 22, 2013 5:03 PM ET 

Last Updated: Aug 22, 2013 10:58 PM ET


Art and music are less vulnerable to cognitive decline, a new Canadian study suggests.
Neurologists at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto found that artists suffering from vascular dementia may still be able to draw spontaneously and from memory, despite being unable to complete simple, everyday tasks.
"We discovered that there is a disproportion between the degree that artists lose some of their memory function, their orientation and other day-to-day cognitive functions. But at the same time, some of their art form is preserved," Dr. Luis Fornazzari, a neurological consultant at St. Michael’s Hospital memory clinic and lead author of the paper, told CBC News.
Artists compared with non-artists are better protected, he added. "Due to their art, the brain is better protected [against] diseases like Alzheimer's, vascular dementia, and even strokes. They have more reserve in their brain in order to give functions.
Read more at CBC News 

Alongside Monet, Amazon Features Artists With Special Needs


By 


As Amazon.com enters the world of fine art this week, the Internet retail giant is putting a spotlight on artists with developmental disabilities.
Los Angeles-based DAC Gallery — which represents some 140 artists with developmental disabilities — is one of about 150 art galleries and dealers being included in the launch of Amazon Art, a new section of the retail website that features fine art from some of the nation’s top galleries.
DAC Gallery is part of the nonprofit Exceptional Children’s Foundation, which offers a handful of art studios where individuals with developmental disabilities hone their craft. Artists in the program have previously shown their work at the Smithsonian Institution and the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., among other venues, officials with the nonprofit said.
Read more at Disability Scoop

Dan Keplinger – Artist and Motivational Speaker




By: cerebralpalsy.org

Dan is an artist that paints with a stick attached to a headband. Dan has mixed spastic and athetoid cerebral palsy.


Painter’s canvas becomes his voice

Dan Keplinger, artist, motivational speaker and the subject of the Academy Award-winning documentary King Gimp, isn’t sure if he discovered his voice through art, or if art gave him a voice. For Dan his passion for art began when his high school teacher encouraged him to express himself through art.
“I just look for powerful feelings and emotions that give me a certain connection,” said Dan. “My art speaks what I would be saying with words.”
At around 9-years-old a documentary film crew began documenting area children of differing economic backgrounds and began following Dan’s journey. The documentary, King Gimp, received an Academy Award and his artwork sales soared and his calendar filled with speaking engagements.
“People are more willing to take time to understand me,” said Dan. “I do not know if they now realize that I do have something to say, or if what I do say just blows them away.”



Visit Dan Keplinger’s website for more information.