Kamis, 30 September 2010

10/7/10 Children’s Art: Inside Out

Using imagery seen in drawings created by Haitian children after January’s catastrophic earthquake, art therapist Rebecca DiSunno (School of Visual Arts, New York University) discusses the impact of using art as a therapeutic tool in helping children who have suffered trauma.

Thursday, October 7, 2010
At 4:00 P.M.
Lecture Hall, Sublevel 2

National Museum of African Art,
Smithsonian Institution
950 Independence Avenue, SW
Take Metro to Smithsonian Station

Lecture is free and open to the public.

Rabu, 29 September 2010

CuidadoDeSalud.gov

On July 1st, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) unveiled HealthCare.gov, a transparent, innovative website where consumers can compare insurance plans specific to their life situation and local community.
 
Earlier this month, HHS introduced CuidadoDeSalud.gov, the partner site of HealthCare.gov. CuidadoDeSalud.gov is a one-stop-shop for Spanish-speakers seeking information about the implementation of the Affordable Care Act as well as other health resources. It will help Spanish-speaking Americans take control of their health care by connecting them with new information and resources that will help them access quality, affordable health care coverage.
 
Similar to HealthCare.gov, CuidadoDeSalud.gov offers an insurance finder (Explore Sus Opciones de Cobertura), explains the Affordable Care Act in step-by-step detail (Comprender la Nueva Ley) and offers information for families with children (familias con niños), senior citizens (adultos mayores), people with disabilities (personas con incapacidad)  and others. In October, CuidadoDeSalud.gov will include price estimates for health insurance plans.
 
Said HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, “CuidadoDeSalud.gov will give Latinos across the nation better information about the choices they have, how much they cost, and what they can expect from their doctor--specific to their life situation and local community.”

Symposium: ABANDONMENT AND THE BUILDING OF TRUST


The Joint Institutes Candidates’ Committee  Presents
The 16th Annual Candidates’ Symposium


ABANDONMENT AND THE BUILDING OF TRUST
Sunday, November 14, 2010, 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

At the Hyatt Regency Bethesda
One Bethesda Metro Center – 7400 Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD  20814

This annual symposium is presented as a forum for members of the mental health community to compare and contrast the approach of differing schools of psychoanalytic theory. 
Representatives from each of the 5 training institutes in the Washington metropolitan area will discuss their understanding of the patient’s inner world, the analytic relationship, and the use of technique.

Case PresentationRobert Gerlits, MSW
Advanced Candidate
Washington Center for Psychoanalysis
Discussants

Dorothy Holmes, PhD                                                                              Karen Proner, MS
Baltimore Washington Center for Psychoanalysis                         New York Freudian Society, Washington Program

Doug Dennett, MD                                                                                     Katherine Brunkow, MSW
International Institute for Psychoanalytic Training                         Washington Center for Psychoanalysis
 
Elizabeth Carr, APRN, MSN, BC

Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis



The Joint Institute Candidate’s Committee is an Ad Hoc Committee of Psychoanalytic Candidates from the five Washington metropolitan area psychoanalytic training programs: Baltimore Washington Center for Psychoanalysis, Institute of Contemporary Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, International Institute for Psychoanalytic Training at the International Psychotherapy Institute, New York Freudian Society, and Washington Center for Psychoanalysis.  Our purpose is to promote professional collegiality and to enhance dialogue about psychoanalysis among the area training institutes and within the community.

Continuing Education: 4 hours CE/CME



Continuing Medical Education --This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essentials Areas and Policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint sponsorship of The American Psychoanalytic Association and the Washington Center for Psychoanalysis, Inc.  The American Psychoanalytic Association is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians and takes responsibility for the content, quality, and scientific integrity of this CME activity.  The American Psychoanalytic Association designates this educational activity for 1 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s) ™ per hour.  Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the educational activity.  Disclosure information is on record indicating that participating faculty members have no significant financial relationships to disclose.

Continuing Education – Psychology. The Washington Center for Psychoanalysis, Inc. is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists.  The Washington Center for Psychoanalysis, Inc. maintains responsibility for the program and its content and offers 1 credit hour per hour for this activity.

Continuing Education – Social Work.  The programs of the Washington Center for Psychoanalysis, Inc. meet the criteria for continuing education as defined by the Maryland Board of Social Work Examiners, District of Columbia and Virginia Boards of Social Work, and the American Board of Examiners in Clinical Social Work.  The Washington Center for Psychoanalysis, Inc. designates this program as a continuing education activity for social work for 1 credit hour per activity hour.

Important Disclosure Information for all learners:  none of the planners and presenters of this CME program have any relevant financial relationships to disclose.


Directions: The Hyatt regency Bethesda is located on the Metro’s Red Line at the Bethesda Metro Station.  The street address is 7400 Wisconsin Avenue in Bethesda, MD, at the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and Montgomery Lane.  Free parking on Sundays is available at the Montgomery County parking garage located a block form the hotel across Wisconsin Avenue on Montgomery Lane.  Parking is also available for a fee ($10) in the lot below the Hyatt.

Registration: $60 ($65 walk-in registration).  Candidates and Students: $30 ($35 walk-in).  Seating is limited and pre-registration is strongly encouraged.  To register, checks (payable to JICC) should be mailed to Blair Bunting MD, Treasurer, JICC, 513 Forest Avenue, Suite 209, Richmond VA 23229.  Call 804 282 3882, option 2 (Dr. Bunting) or email:   jiccmail@gmail.com if you have any question.  Please note that preregistration closes on November 7, 2010.

Psychoanalytic Takes on "Trauma" in Film 2010-2011


The program is co-sponsored by the Washington Center for Psychoanalysis and by the ISSTD (International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation)


  • COURSE COORDINATORS: Khashayar Beigi, PhD candidate and Jan Freeman, MSW, LCSW-C
  • LOCATION: 6912 Ayr Lane, Bethesda, MD
  • TIME: 7:30 pm
  • COSTS: CE credit: $300 ($250 Member rate*) / $175 for General Audience
  • Register online at www.wcpweb.org


FILMS:


October 29

 
Anti-Christ (2009) After their child dies, a therapist and his wife flee to their cabin in the woods, where they hope to mend their emotional wounds. But the grief-stricken couple watches their troubles multiply when very strange things begin to happen. Acclaimed Danish auteur Lars von Trier divides this tale into multiple narratives, revealing a surreal, horrific psychological adventure about the evils of nature, humanity and desire. Discussant: Khashayar Beigi, Ph.D. candidate


November 12


Waltz with Bashir (2008) Director Ari Folman employs vivid black-and-white animation in this Golden Globe-winning film, exploring the memory gaps in his life during his service for the Israeli army in the Lebanese war of the early 1980s. Recounting stories based on recorded interviews with colleagues and friends, Folman relives the horrors of war and dissects the curious coping mechanisms humans use to survive under brutal circumstances. In Hebrew with English subtitles. Discussant: Richard M. Waugaman MD


 December 10

 
Sybil (1976) Sally Field won an Emmy for her riveting portrayal of the young, shy artist and teacher whose real life story and name came to be equated with what was then known as Multiple Personality Disorder. Joann Woodward portrays her psychoanalyst, Dr. Cornelia Wilbur. The film shows how a child's developing mind lives through unbearable traumas through dissociation, resulting in alternate "personalities" to cope with the abuse, yet leaves the legacy of a fractured mind. Discussant: Richard P. Kluft, M.D.


 January 21


Turtles Can Fly (2004) The first film shot in Iraq since the beginning of the war. This Iranian-directed film follows the lives of a group of Kurdish children living on the Iraqi-Kurdish border in a displaced persons tent camp, trying to survive in an endless war zone. It follows a savvy thirteen year old boy who installs satellite dishes in order to translate news of the coming war to local villagers and organizes his fellow orphans into landmine-collection teams so they can earn a living. In Kurdish with English subtitles. Discussant: Marc Nemiroff, Ph.D.


February 11


The Pawnbroker (1964) One of the first films to deal with the effects of Nazi Germany's concentration camps on their survivors. Sol Nazerman, operator of a pawn shop, and a concentration camp survivor faces a horrid internal conflict. Being engulfed in a New York ghetto Environment, Sol suffers flashbacks. The flashbacks juxtapose concentration camp treatment with ghetto neighborhood treatment. Discussant: Jeffery Jay, Ph.D


March 18

The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo (2009) The best screen adaptation of an incredibly successful book in years. It is an intense, compelling film of mystery, sexual violence, and revenge. Lisbet is a brilliant young woman, a very determined and creative survivor of abuse. Mikael is a disgraced, investigative journalist, who is hired to investigate the disappearance of a teenage girl 36 years previously. Together, they uncover dark and shocking secrets in the family. In Swedish with English subtitles. Discussant: Joan Turkus, M.D.


April 8


Taxi Driver (1976) Martin Scorsese crafts a violently prophetic, gripping vision of urban decay and insanity in which Vietnam vet Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro) is 26, a loner in the mean streets of New York City, slipping slowly into isolation and violent misanthropy. In solving his insomnia by driving a yellow cab on the night shift, he grows increasingly disgusted by the low-lifes that hang out at night: "Someday a real rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets." Discussant: Julio Szmuilowicz, M.D.
 

Selasa, 28 September 2010

GWUniversity Art Therapy Clinic

Hello colleagues!

I am writing to remind you that the GWUniversity Art Therapy Clinic is open
in Alexandria, VA (2 blocks from King St metro).  Art therapy may be a
primary or adjunctive treatment for a variety of mental health issues. We
have immediate openings for children, adolescents and adults. We are also
able to accommodate some families, couples and groups.

The GWATC offers services to the community at a sliding fee scale, starting
as low as $5/ session. Clients are seen by 2nd and 3rd year MA Art Therapy
graduate students. All students seeing clients in the clinic are taking
trauma focused art therapy and counseling classes, and receiving supervision
from  licensed professional faculty.

We appreciate your involvement with GW's Art Therapy Program and welcome any
potential referrals you may have for our center. Please feel free to contact
me, or have the client contact me, with any questions. The initial intake
session is offered at no charge.

I am attaching a flier which may be posted or shared as you see fit.
Thank you in advance for your interest and support!

Best,
Tally

Tally Tripp MA, MSW, LICSW, ATR-BC
Director, Art Therapy Center
The George Washington University
Graduate Art Therapy Program
(mailing address)
1925 Ballenger Ave., Suite 250
Alexandria, VA  22314
(walk-in address)
413 John Carlyle St.
Alexandria, VA 22314

703 299 4173 (GW office)
202 785 2124 (DC office)
703 517 3312 (cell)

Children Learn What They Live


Children Learn What They Live

A Soundbite by Allison Davis Maxon, LMFT, Kinship Center Regional Executive Director, Adoptions and Education


The primary method of early learning is imitation (Gruber and Voneche, l977).  Children imitate what they see, what they hear, and what they experience.  They typically do what they are shown to do rather than what they’re told to do.

What happens to a child who is repeatedly exposed to violence and aggression?  How is that child’s body, heart and mind impacted?  The long term results of chronic violence on a child can be devastating.  Children who experience overwhelming fear and terror develop defensive strategies to help them survive…strategies such as becoming impulsive, reactive and easily moved to aggression.
Unfortunately these survival strategies make it difficult for such children to develop healthy relationships. And since our primary need as human beings is our need to connect, the lack of healthy relationships becomes a critical issue.

So where is the good news?  The good news is that because children primarily learn through imitation, they can also learn to develop healthy coping strategies when they gain access to adults who can model those effective strategies and relationship skills.  In fact the wonderful news is that children actually heal, grow and learn in the context of healing relationships!


Click here for a powerful 21-minute video by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network about the effects of abuse and violence on the developing child.

http://www.kinshipcenter.org/category/field-notes/


Jumat, 24 September 2010

9/25 Museum Day!

Museum Day is an annual event hosted by Smithsonian Media in which participating museums across the country open their doors for free to anyone presenting a Museum Day Ticket.

Read more: http://microsite.smithsonianmag.com/museumday/index.html#ixzz10Tk5HVaZ

Selasa, 21 September 2010

Primate Therapy

A fun story for today...
Jimmy the painting chimp draws hordes to Rio zoo

Monday, September 20, 2010 2:21:47 PM
Photo By AP

A retired circus chimpanzee is the Cezanne of simians, drawing crowds to a Brazilian zoo to watch him paint. The 26-year-old chimp called Jimmy has been producing surprisingly lovely paintings each day for three weeks at the Niteroi Zoo.

Trainer Roched Seba said Monday Jimmy doesn't like the toys and other diversions that other chimps enjoy. So three weeks ago, Seba introduced him to painting after reading about animals in zoos elsewhere that enjoyed a little canvas time.

Temperamental as great artists can be, Jimmy at times declines to paint if his cage is surrounded by too many gawkers.

But for at least 30 minutes a day, he carefully dips his brush into plastic paint containers and uses broad, bold strokes to create his art.

Senin, 20 September 2010

Update on the Naropa AT Response to Wildfires

"Art has the potential to change lives and often in profound ways. When words are not enough, we turn to images and symbols to tell our stories. And in telling our stories through art, we can find a path to health and wellness, emotional reparation, recovery, and ultimately, transformation." 
- Cathy Malchiodi

The Naropa art therapy community is currently offering 2 forms of support for those impacted by the recent wildfires and would like to offer an invitation for the Naropa community at large to participate.  The Art Therapy program is based on the foundation of nurturing socially engaged art therapists through the practice of serving and building community through the arts.  We believe in the inherent power of art making to improve lives, bring about positive change, build community and to help tell people's stories when words are not enough. 

Please join us in one of two ways:

* Free Naropa Community Art Studio Open Studio at the Nalanda Campus on 63rd and Arapahoe in Boulder will be open each Sunday from 09/12 until 10/31 from 10am-1pm for persons affected by the fire. It is an open studio with the intention of creating individual and community art in order to express and witness the experiences, emotions, and stories of people impacted by this tragic event.  All who are feeling the impact of this fire are invited to participate.

* Offer words and/or art in cards of gratitude!  Please take a moment to write a note of gratitude to one of the many fire fighters, volunteers, and rescue workers who provided front-line assistance to local residents impacted by the wildfire!  The act of taking care to create something thoughtful and special for another human has the potential to be a very powerful experience for the sender and the receiver.  Cards are ready for your kind words and/or creative flair at the Transpersonal Counseling Psychology (TCP) office on the Paramita campus.

Write a note of gratitude in a pre-decorated card
• Take a set of blank cards to decorate for those who do not have time to decorate or do not identify as artists who would still like to contribute
• Take cards for your friends, classes, roommates, or co-workers to decorate or write in
• Make your own homemade cards and drop them off at the TCP Office front desk



All cards will be collected and distributed 
to local Boulder agencies on:
Monday, October 4th

Please contact Chelsea O'Neil at chelseaoneil@gmail.com with any questions

Art therapy helps deaf kids process sexual abuse






Brian Berlinski of DeafHope in Oakland says art therapy is particularly suited to deaf survivors of abuse because it is very visual and helps the victim connect with the unconscious part of the brain.

Art therapist Brian Berlinski works at DeafHope, an Oakland-based nonprofit that provides counseling, education and services for deaf survivors of domestic and sexual violence.

Berlinski, 30, grew up in New Jersey and at 2 became deaf after contracting meningitis. Hearing aids restored 70 percent of his hearing, and from age 10 he went to classes with an American Sign Language interpreter.
He has a bachelor of arts degree from Rochester Institute of Technology and a master's in art therapy from Nazareth College in Rochester, N.Y. He lives in Emeryville with his partner of two years, Michael Berry. Berlinski spoke through ASL interpreter Shelley Lawrence.

It's still very taboo to talk about domestic and sexual violence in the deaf community. It's not unlike the hearing community. But I think deaf people, due to language and system barriers, have less access to the right information - especially about dating and health care. At DeafHope it's our job to cut down on the stigmatization and provide materials and information in American Sign Language.

I work with children who are survivors of sexual assault. Sometimes with deaf children, sometimes with children who are hearing but their parents may be deaf. The mother might be a survivor, so I work with the kids; I help them process the abusive experience.

Art therapy fits a deaf survivor because it's very visual and helps the survivor to connect with the unconscious part of the brain. That's where the trauma is stored. Art therapy takes them through that experience again and provides a safe way to bring it to consciousness - without their being overwhelmed by the trauma again.
We work with masks a lot. Children often feel like they can't express themselves because of the abuse in the family, and they keep it inside. So they draw a mask of what they're afraid to project outside of that environment, which provides a safe outlet for identifying and expressing painful emotions.

You can't lie through art. The therapist looks to see where the emphasis is put by the child - where they add more detail or a different color. And that gives us valuable information about what's going on with that person.
There's no hard data on the prevalence of domestic violence in the deaf community, but based on anecdotal proof, the numbers are about the same as in the hearing community. What's different is that deaf survivors have more barriers to getting help, and less opportunity to escape or flee because of those barriers.
This work can be emotionally exhausting. Every day we remind ourselves about the importance of self-care. With survivors we're preaching self-care, and if we don't follow our own advice, that's contradictory. So we learn how to not bring work home.
I've worked in other places where I was the lone deaf person and I struggled with communication barriers. It was hard to make a personal connection, to feel involved with what people were saying and the latest news. And here, I'm not worried about that. It's such a comfortable environment.

I've not worn my hearing aid in almost four years - since I moved to California and started working here. I leave it at home because I don't need it. When I want to listen to music, I make that exception. I have an iPod. Or, if I go see a movie, I use my hearing aid.

I really appreciate life without sound, and I take great joy in my identity as a deaf person.
There's so much noise out there, between the yelling and the horns and the phones and the TV blaring and the bar noise. And deaf people - we just talk to one another visually and without effort. We need light; that's the one requirement.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=%2Fc%2Fa%2F2010%2F09%2F20%2FDDP81EQ124.DTL#ixzz104fB7Xtr

Minggu, 19 September 2010

Giving Thanks!

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology students from Naropa gathered on Saturday to cut, fold, and decorate handmade cards.  Art therapy students are highly encouraged to pick up a small stack of cards to decorate and return without messages so that those that don’t feel comfortable decorating are still able to write messages.  We are looking for any and all forms of gratitude, particularly making it easier for those that do not identify as artists or have the time to decorate to be able to participate by writing messages in beautiful, handmade cards.

Naropa community members are invited to…
• Write a note of gratitude in a pre-decorated card
• Take a set of blank cards and decorate them yourself
• Take cards for your friends, roommates, co-workers or family members to decorate or write in

Cards are ready for kind words and creative flair at the front desk of the Transpersonal Counseling Psychology office on the Paramita campus. 

All cards will be collected and distributed to local Boulder agencies on: Monday, October 4th

Jumat, 17 September 2010

The Art Gym

September 17, 2010
Unlimited Time to Experiment and Discover
The Art Gym

We are proud to announce a new cost efficient rental program for artists to explore print and paper media in our studios: The Art Gym.
 
Members of the Art Gym work on an unlimited basis during all open hours, day and night for $150 a month. Members are artists, just like you, who are looking for unlimited time to experiment, discover and create new work.
 
Art Gym members receive an invitation to Pyramid's internal calendar to see when studios are available and when others artists are here.  You can work when its convenient for you and be a part of Pyramid's diverse community of artists.
 
To find out more information or to sign up today, go to Art Gym or email gretchen.
 
 
Image Credit: Gretchen Schermerhorn

Senin, 13 September 2010

Offering Gratitude!

The fire has been one of the most destructive fires in Colorado, destroying more homes than any other blaze in state history. 700 firefighters and support personnel have been in action for days!  We will be making thank-you cards for firefighters, law enforcement, and rescue/aid workers helping with the fire efforts.  We need help!  Artists, art therapists, students, friends, family, Boulderites, and the like....

If you're interested in mailing in cards in from somewhere else or making a donation, please email chelseaoneil@gmail.com for contact info.


We will be making thank-you cards for firefighters, law enforcement, and rescue/aid workers helping with the fire efforts on
Saturday, Sept. 18th we will be meeting in the studio from 12pm-4pm to…
•    Cut paper
•    Fold cards and bind in small packages with ribbon
•    Decorate cards
•    Write messages

Cards will be at the front desk of the TCP office, the art studio and possibly somewhere on the Arapahoe campus for students and faculty to write messages and/or decorate the cards and then return them to the pick-up point.  I will then collect all of the cards and drop them off at designated stations throughout the community.  Awesome Amy of the 1st years is checking on card stock donations.  If you have any materials that could be of use please bring them by on Saturday the 18th!

Art therapy students are highly encouraged to pick up a small stack of cards to decorate and return without messages so that those that don’t feel comfortable decorating are still able to write messages.  
This is a GREAT activity for students to work on while in community art studio or on Sunday if you’re willing to help out in NCAS!  Feel free to take cards to your places of employment, in the community or classes, for your roommates, or bring your own homemade cards from other places for the donation.   
We are looking for any and all forms of gratitude, particularly blank cards which will make it easier for those that do not identify as artists or have the time to decorate to be able to participate by writing messages in beautiful, handmade cards.

DC Arts Events and Calls for Artists

Open Call To Artists  
 The Fridge 2011 Season
 
The Fridge seeks professional quality work for its 2011 season, which will include a variety of group and solo art shows.

Please submit resume, artist statement and up to 10 digital images of work for consideration. No greater than 10 MB total. If the project is still conceptual, submit up to 10 digital images of recent work and a vision statement for the proposed project.

The Fridge does not offer funding for the completion of projects. Please include your full name at the beginning of the images and in the subject and body of your e-mail. Deadline for submissions is Friday, October 1.

Send submissions to
me@thefridgedc.com.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=9ex6o9n6&et=1103656008623&s=3871&e=001bXKcSqBG1tFhlF5lV4VdJXxvQBAqtwxh2cVuqUHJ688cUaS-ZsP9_KEHyI_HWmCX98Q1pcJPQffAJ4qKDo8Gxct23r-m7fnPkKcqkuqzU-3zZaCksMOzn8LUOJvdSn-O2010 FotoWeek DC  International Awards Competition 
 
The 2010FotoWeek DC International Awards Competition will be here in a flash.

Deadline for submissions is Monday, September 20th. 
 
  • Cash prizes total $23,450!
  • Invitation-only Awards Ceremony for winners at the Corcoran Gallery of Art
  • Winning images exhibited at the Corcoran Atrium during FotoWeek festival, November 6-13.
  • Exposure through outdoors/indoor projections and our on-line gallery visited by thousands each month.
  • Exposure to curators, museums, collectors and media.
  • Entries may be made in any of 12 categories, including the Spirit of Washington ($5000 cash prize) which recognizes images that capture the true essence of the Nation's Capital.
For more information and to register for the competition, click: www.FotoWeekDCAwards.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=9ex6o9n6&et=1103656008623&s=3871&e=001bXKcSqBG1tH8xuj-NS0QA43dsQpD7BoKSKBh7uvTv-bJx6_BljfKI9vRRp-XvB6rKDy7ZpV02MR7ZIF5Qkdcq1RVDKYGutOo0Tl7MFb1g65iD26GeulU4A==Call To Artists
The Community for Creative Non-Violence


Celebrate the 40th Anniversary of The CCNV and raise awareness of homelessness by displaying and selling your art at their event on Saturday, September 11.

A table will be provided free of charge, but all participating artists must agree to donate a percentage of the proceeds to the shelter.

If interested, please contact Andrea Blackstone at 202-709-2331.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
17th StreetScape Art Show

Dupont Circle Citizens Association

Are you an artist? DCCA is sponsoring the 17th StreetScape Art Show on Saturday, September 25. To secure a place in the Dupont Fine Arts Show, Dupont area artists must apply by Saturday, September 11.

For instructions and more information, visit www.dupont-circle.org or contact Debby Hanrahan at debbyhanrahan@yahoo.com.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bill To Protect Artists
DC Advocates for the Arts

A public hearing has been scheduled for Bill 18-451: Artist Protection Act on Wednesday, September 22 from 11am to 1pm. It's critical that our community offer testimony at the hearing to help policy-makers understand our support for this bill.

Under current District law, works of art owned by artists but in the possession of galleries can be seized by creditors of the gallery. The bill would clarify that works of art loaned to galleries are not subject to the galleries' creditors and offer other protections.
 
Email DC Advocates Chair Rob Bettmann at robert@dcadvocatesforthearts.org for more information or visit the Facebook event page.

CREATE: Part Time Program Manager

As you know, Tamar is getting ready to retire. As part of the transition, we are looking for a part time program manager to take on some of my responsibilities as I move into the executive director role.

Please help us in the search for candidates for the part time program manager position. We have posted the vacancy announcement on Craigslist and will also be posting it on our website and in the Arts and Humanities e-newsletter. However, word of mouth often gets the best candidates, so help us by passing along the information below to your listservs and to anyone you think might be interested.

Thanks for your continuing support of all we do at CREATE, especially during this transition!

Heena Genti

CREATE Arts Center: Part Time Program Manager

Downtown Silver Spring arts center seeks self-starting, motivated, efficient, and organized individual with excellent people skills as Program Manager.  The Program Manager maintains the computerized accounting system, manages classes, camps and events, and assists with marketing and publicity. Flexible schedule – 20 hours per week during regular business hours. 

Must have an interest in the visual arts and arts education, knowledge of Word and Excel or other similar software, a bachelor’s degree, experience managing projects and people, and excellent time management, organization, and strong verbal and written communication skills.

Experience with the visual arts, teaching or other work with children, marketing, nonprofit management, website content and design, and QuickBooks, Publisher, and Access, or similar software is a plus.

For more information about CREATE Arts Center go to www.createartscenter.org. Send cover letter and resume to info@createartscenter.org no later than September 24, 2010. CREATE is an equal opportunity employer

Jumat, 10 September 2010

Naropa Art Therapy Community Responds to Boulder Fire

 A fire broke out Monday outside of Boulder and spread over roughly 6,300 acres. It has since become one of the most destructive fires in Colorado, destroying more homes than any other blaze in state history.  According to a recent Huffington Post article, about 3,500 people have been out of their homes for four days and fire managers said as many as 700 firefighters and support personnel and seven air tankers were assigned to fight the fire, considered the nation's top firefighting priority.

We are quickly brainstorming ideas to aid fire evacuees in the area.  As students and professionals in the art therapy community we are joining forces to help in whatever way that we can.  First off,  

The Naropa Community Art Studio at the Nalanda Campus on 63rd and Arapahoe in Boulder will be open each Sunday from 09/12 until 10/31 from 10am-1pm for persons affected by the fire. It is an open studio with the intention of creating individual and community art in order to express and witness the experiences, emotions, and stories of people impacted by this tragic event.  All who are feeling the impact of this fire are invited to participate.

All other Naropa art therapy community efforts will be posted on this blog.  Feedback and ideas for projects are welcome and encouraged.

Many blessings.  Stay safe.

For the latest news on the fire and resources available in the community, check out this link:

http://twitter.com/YahooNews/boulderfire 


or visit http://www.boulderfire.com/


 

Kamis, 09 September 2010

26th Annual Open House Arts Festival & 13th Annual MultiCultural Book Festival

September 11, 2010  from 12-6pm
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts - 2700 F Street, NW

This year's Open House Arts Festival is part of the Kennedy Center's Celebrate Mexico 2010, and features artists from the Washington, DC region and Mexico as well as representation of the Kennedy Center's programming for the upcoming 2010?2011 season in more than 20 performances, demonstrations, and events. Families can meet their favorite authors - including Alma Flor Ada, Joseph Bruchac, R. Gregory Christie, Shane Evans, Jacqueline Woodson, and Laurence Yep, listen to book readings, and buy books.

Rabu, 08 September 2010

American Medical Association- Takes Note of Art Therapy with Child Disaster Survivors

Virtual Mentor. September 2010, Volume 12, Number 9: 757-760.
IMAGES OF HEALING AND LEARNING

Art Therapy for Children Who Have Survived Disaster

Art therapy is an effective tool for working with both adults and children coping with trauma because it bypasses the disconnection trauma can cause between memories of the event and the verbal regions of the brain. Recently, it has been used to treat children affected by large-scale disaster events.

Sadia Hussain, MD
Art therapy is a growing field of mental health treatment that uses art as a form of illustrative communication. The approach is based on the belief that the creative process, acting as a form of subconscious expression, can help identify inner conflicts, engender self-esteem and self-awareness, reduce stress, and rebuild an overall physical, emotional, and social sense of well-being. Art therapy is thought to be especially valuable for treating children, who often lack the social or verbal capabilities to express their thoughts and emotions, particularly when they have experienced trauma.

History and Principles

The field of art therapy was developed over the course of the 1940s and ’50s through the efforts of a few theorists working independently of each other. Psychotherapist and educator Margaret Naumburg pioneered its use with psychiatric patients and published various works on the subject, including Studies of the “Free” Art Expression of Behavior Problem Children and Adolescents as a Means of Diagnosis and Therapy (1947) and Schizophrenic Art: Its Meaning in Psychotherapy (1950). Naumburg drew on Sigmund Freud’s analysis of dream imagery as a presence of the unconscious self. Freud wrote, “We experience it [a dream] predominantly in visual images…. Part of the difficulty of giving an account of dreams is due to our having to translate these images into words” [1]. Freud’s psychotherapeutic methods relied on free association and the idea of “catharsis,” during which the unconscious reveals itself to the conscious. Naumburg saw art as able to connect these two, becoming a window within the self that would allow the conscious to “hear” the unconscious. This is the underlying principle of art therapy: the idea of “drawing from within” [2].
A few years after Naumburg, Edith Kramer emerged on the art therapy scene. Kramer, an artist who fled Prague before World War I, taught art classes to children who were refugees of Nazi Germany. She felt that the creativity involved in producing art had the potential to heal by enabling the transfer of some impulses and emotions into images [3]. When Kramer came to the United States in 1951, she worked as an art therapist with children at Wiltwyck, a residential school for mentally disturbed children in New York City. While Naumburg’s theory focused on the idea of making the unconscious conscious through art, Kramer’s emphasized the healing potential of the creative process itself [3, 4]. Naumburg’s methods were reflective of her role as a primary clinician, whereas Kramer’s theories were more defined by her status as an adjunct therapist [4]. The differences that have existed since the conception of this field persist today, creating a wide variety of forms and goals for art therapy.
Art therapy has three main benefits for the patient: (1) it engages the physical body in relaxation through manipulation of art materials, (2) it allows the patient to engage in a personalized introspective exercise in which the process and finished product become the “symbolic container of traumatic memories” [5], and (3) it allows cognitive reflection through discussion of the artwork [5]. The latter component, especially, enhances the therapist-patient relationship. The process of making art can help bypass verbal centers of the brain, allowing the therapist to safely examine and discuss thoughts manifested in a physical, visual way [6].
In 1971, British pediatrician Donald Winnicot explored art as a potential tool for initiating communication between child and therapist [3]. He developed a technique in which the child and therapist draw together, which he called “the squiggle game” [3]. In this technique, the therapist draws a squiggle on a blank paper, and then the child adds a squiggle, followed by a third squiggle, and so on, until an image is created.

Art Therapy for Disaster Survivors

Recently, an increasing number of pediatric disaster survivors have been treated with art therapy. NYU’s Child Study Center encourages and teaches parents and guardians to use art as a means of communication with children after a stressful occurrence, starting the conversation, for example, by asking about formal elements of the artwork, such as the use of color or shapes [7]. Following the devastation of the Gulf Coast in hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the Hyogo-NOMA Art Therapy Initiative has provided weekly art therapy for over 250 New Orleans public school children who might not otherwise have had access to mental health care. The therapist, Holly Wherry, MAAT, chose the school setting so the children could remain in a familiar, comfortable environment with a built-in support system.
Rebekah Chilcote, an art therapy graduate student at the time of the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka, used art therapy to work with 113 girl survivors between the ages of 5 and 13 who were selected by their teachers as those who exhibited the most acute symptoms of grief and trauma [8]. The children were divided into age-appropriate groups of roughly 10 each, which met once weekly for a month. Chilcote prompted the girls to express themselves artistically on a given topic (e.g., “my life, myself” and “the day I will never forget”) and then present their artwork to the group [8]. Chilcote concluded that art is an effective, psychologically beneficial intervention for children who have undergone significant psychological trauma—and one that can be administered cross-culturally [8].
The ICAF, or International Child Art Foundation, established in 1997, is an important force in the field of art therapy worldwide. Following the American tragedy on September 11, 2001, ICAF, in collaboration with psychiatrists and psychologists, asked children to use their creativity to reduce transgenerational transmission of trauma and hatred by producing a vision of peaceful coexistence [9].

Art Therapy and Trauma

Art has been found to be an especially effective tool for working with both adults and children coping with trauma. A traumatic experience can lead to acute stress disorder (ASD, anxiety or dissociation that lasts for a few days or weeks after a stressor), and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD, a more long-lasting constellation of similar symptoms). In one study, pediatric patients suffering from ASD after sexual abuse who were treated with art therapy showed a significant reduction in symptoms [5]. Other situations in which children are treated with art therapy are those associated with grave illness or injury—including cancer, renal disease, chronic pain disorders, and severe burns.
The traumatic experience has been described as a dual occurrence, especially for children. The self dissociates during the trauma, creating a rift between tolerable conscious awareness of the event and the intolerable emotional memory of the event that is tucked away in the unconscious [6]. Physical, emotional, and mental energy are expended in keeping the difficult emotions away from the conscious mind. Neuroimaging shows dissociation (which manifests, for example, as amnesia, depersonalization, emotional detachment, and de-realization) when recall of traumatic events is attempted. The left frontal cortex, specifically Broca’s area (responsible for speech), remains inactive, while the right hemisphere—particularly the region around the amygdala, associated with emotional and automatic arousal—is particularly active [10].
Traumatic memories appear to take root not in the verbal, analytical parts of the brain but in the nonverbal regions of the limbic system, from which cognition is somewhat detached (and which, Babette Rothschild postulates, may provide a kind of link to the unconscious mind) [10]. This impairs patients’ ability to communicate with themselves or others about their experiences [10]. Children may be further limited by still-developing language skills, all of which makes nonverbal modalities of expression, such as art, formidable tools for treatment.

References

  1. Rubin JA. Approaches to Art Therapy: Theory and Technique. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Brunner-Routledge; 2001.
  2. Malchiodi CA. The Art Therapy Sourcebook. 2nd ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Professional; 2006.
  3. Malchiodi CA. Understanding Children’s Drawings. New York, NY: Guilford Press; 1998.
  4. Rubin JA. Art Therapy: An Introduction. New York, NY: Bruner-Mazel; 1998.
  5. Sarid O. Trauma and acute stress disorder: a comparison between cognitive behavioral intervention and art therapy. Arts Psychother. 2010;37(1):8-12.
  6. Orr P. Art therapy with children after a disaster: a content analysis. Arts Psychother. 2007;34(1):350-361.
  7. Goodman RF. Talking to kids about their art. http://www.aboutourkids.org/articles/talking_kids_about_their_art. Accessed August 10, 2010.
  8. Chilcote R. Art therapy with child tsunami survivors in Sri Lanka. Art Ther: J Am Art Ther Assoc. 2007;24(4):156-162.
  9. International Child Art Foundation. Fact sheet, May 2010. www.icaf.org/pdfs/ICAF%20Fact%20Sheet%20-%20May%202010.pdf. Accessed August 10, 2010.
  10. Eaton L. A review of research and methods used to establish art therapy as an effective treatment method for traumatized children. Arts Psychother. 2007;34(1):256-262.

Sadia Hussain, MD, is a first-year resident in the 5-year combined emergency medicine and internal medicine training program at the State University of New York (SUNY) Downstate/Kings County Hospital Center in Brooklyn. Dr. Hussain’s interests include disaster medicine, tropical diseases, and international medicine; to this end, she has worked in Haiti, Ghana, Malawi, and Brazil.

http://virtualmentor.ama-assn.org/2010/09/imhl1-1009.html
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