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July 03, 2008

Find the Cost of Freedom, Buried in the Ground

Censored Truth It's an old Crosby, Stills & Nash song, by Steven Stills. Many of us who were there in the 70s still remember the words. I know I can recite them from memory: "Find the cost of freedom, buried in the ground. Mother Earth will swallow you; lay your burdens down."

Tomorrow is the Fourth of July.  Not only my favorite holiday the whole year through -- sorry, I'm a New Englander, we're just born that way -- but also another opportunity - along with Memorial Day, and Veterans Day - to stop and honor the service of those who sacrificed their lives for freedom, or at least, responded to what they saw as the call of duty that they responded to, while others did not. Those whose blood was shed on American soil -- in Lexington, Massachusetts, in the Revolutionary War -- and also, more recently, in the jungles of Vietnam, in the mountains of Afghanistan and in the sands and urban jungles of Iraq.

I'm thinking today about censorship -- and the power of an image to convey, in a single instance, what those of us who labor over our words perhaps never can.  The picture, they claim, is worth 1,000 words -- perhaps because it communicates, in an instant, across barriers of language, space and time -- what human beings instinctively understand, nonverbally.  With war: that there is a price; that it is never really glorious; that those who give their lives often do so -- as the poet W.H. Auden wrote about the famous art masterpiece, the "Fall of Icarus," by the Dutch painter, Brueghel -- in a depressingly inglorious context:

"About suffering they were never wrong,

The Old Masters; how well they understood

Its human position; how it takes place

While someone else is eating or opening a window or just walking dully along...

If you don't remember the Greek myth of Icarus you might need some refreshing.  He's the pre-Wright Brothers son of Daedalus, whose father built him a pair of wings, in order to take flight and escape from the island of Crete.  But the father glued the wing feathers in with wax, and then warned his son not to fly too close to the sun (probably without explaining actually why.)  Icarus partially succeeded in his goal -- he was able to fly, but in flying, did get too close to the sun -- at which point the sun's rays melted the wing feathers' wax and he literally dropped out of the sky, into the ocean -- having succeeded in his fabulous quest and also painfully failed, all at the same time.  That's not the parallel with the armed forces: the parallel worth drawing here is that sometimes death on a glorious "mission" turns out to be a most pedestrian thing, and the rest of us, unless we're apprised of it, don't even notice or celebrate.  On a deeper level, it brings up the question: as Americans, how exactly do we "support the troops," if we're not even really aware of what they're up against?

Unlike Vietnam, where grainy black and white news footage of U.S. soldiers fighting and dying in foreign jungles was often watched during dinner, with Walter Cronkite narrating -- in Iraq and Afghanistan, we're reduced to very little coverage and certainly not much that could "upset" our "overly tender sensibilities."  No flag-draped coffins being offloaded at Dover Air Force Base, instantly communicating that for every loss in combat there's a grieving, distraught family and a hole in the community, left by that veteran, that will never be filled.  Even those, like me, who don't exactly excel at math -- we're more than dimly aware that for every servicemember KIA -- or killed in action -- there are scores more wounded and disfigured for life -- emotionally scarred (invisibly) as well as visibly.  The human costs are staggering: those are daddies and mommies, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, employees and employers who come home different: maybe unable to work, maybe unable to function - initially or long-term; maybe unable to take care of their families while they struggle with their own wounds of war.  This is the human cost of war: it exists whether we are personally dialed in to it and aware of it, or not.  It is, to use the words of Hedley Peach, a "generic effect of combat."

And while the news media gives scant coverage to what is happening in the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, as surely as the hands of our clock tick daily the minutes and the hours, somebody's sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, fathers, and mothers are dying, and being injured -- somewhere.  We can be for or against the wars -- forget that noise for now -- but at the very least, we ought to be for the veterans.  And their families.  If what happens is fully what they signed up for: so be it.  I'll say this for myself, if no one else: They're better people than I am.  If it's not what they bargained for: even more reason to feel compassion for what they're going through.  But here's a pretty elementary principle: if we don't see it, we can't grasp it -- and we move on with our lives as though nothing were really happening.  No coffins at Dover? No bodies on the news?  I guess this war isn't really costing that much in human terms after all...it's just another blip on our radar, hardly making a difference among the rest of the pronounced concerns of our lives and welfare.  Except that it IS happening -- and men and women are dying, and being injured, often grievously -- and we're, generally speaking, like the villagers in the Icarus poem, above (read the whole thing) pretty unaware of how that affects us, or if it even does.

And THAT is where journalism comes in, and photojournalism -- to convey in a single image, what dozens of column inches can barely touch.  A single image that resourcefully, potently conveys the reality of life and death on the knife edge, on the tip of the spear -- somewhere around the globe, and challenges you, me, us -- the viewer -- to say that it matters, and that we finally understand.

Maybe that's why in every craptastic Third World-ish revolution, they always kill -- um, that would be the military who does the killing -- the intelligentsia -- the artists, the poets, the thinkers, the intellectuals -- first.  Because I guess if you even goad the populace at large to think, why, you're a highly dangerous individual, and should be stopped -- before you can do any more harm (I mean, good.)

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Want a riveting image, that "stops the presses," and conveys for all time the intrinsic truth -- or at least, one powerful truth -- about an experience?  Turn to a photojournalist.  I've read more words than I can think of in my time, but if you want to know what I remember -- it's the images, often Pulitzer Prize-winning, from the eras of our shared experience.  Vietnam? It's the naked young girl, covered in Napalm, running from her burning village.  (We dropped the Napalm, btw...) Famine in Africa?  It's the buzzard, waiting for the tiny dark baby with its protruding ribs to just "hurry up and die, wouldja?!" so the buzzard could eat it.  (The photographer who shot that amazing scene, and won a Pulitzer Prize for it, later killed himself -- perhaps because those who witness tremendous suffering, also suffer tremendously themselves.)

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I'm not going to say who it is, because -- call me a fatalist -- I don't want to wake up tomorrow and find out that he's dead.  ESPECIALLY not on the Fourth of July -- that would be offensive in the extreme.  But the other day, some well-known and ridiculously good photojournalist blogrolled me -- stuck a link to this blog on his blog -- and I checked it out, to see what his stuff was like -- and of course it was riveting.  He's an embedded photojournalist in Iraq, or was, I should say, until the Marine brass apparently got fed up with him, and summarily pulled him out of his embedded assignment and out of the country.  His only offense, from the sounds of things?  Shooting the aftermath of a suicide blast in Ramadi -- you know, the Anbar province -- the Sunni triangle -- the previous hotbed of violence in Iraq -- which if we're to read the mainstream media, why, all that has calmed down considerably from a few years ago, and there's hardly anything brewing there at all.  Well, except for the lives of scores of people who died there, INCLUDING MARINES, in a suicide bombing just last week.  This guy documented it -- as sensitively as one could, given the horrific nature of the scene -- and he expressed the emotional toll it was taking on him, as no other experience had.  And somebody in the Marine Corps upper echelons took offense at what the rest of us call -- oh, I don't know -- the First Amendment -- and took steps to pull him out of there, on the double.

Let's HOPE the guy lives long enough to evacuate safely.  Really.  And then let's hope he still gets to show what he shot, at great personal cost -- because some of the rest of us (it's a refresher course: we're called Americans) want to actually SEE the cost of freedom -- in a way that those of us who don't serve, don't know; and those of us who do, and did -- know only too well.  It's only fair.  If we sanitize the living daylights out of these wars -- for what? -- not only will the American public not "get" the tremendous price paid by those serving AND their families; they won't be as compassionate to the same people afterwards as they need to be.  It's in all of our best interests to actively fight for, and preserve, the freedom of the press.  And that means photojournalists, who document war's horror, sufferings, and triumphs in a way no print journalist could ever begin to approximate.

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For my part, when I saw the photos in question the other day, I had myself a good, therapeutic, and instantaneous cry -- not just for the crumpled bodies of THOSE Marines on the ground -- he was subtle, nuanced and concerned enough not to show their faces, or anything else that identified them -- but for all the others I knew and knew about, who'd fought, been injured, or died there -- or returned home, not quite as intact, in body or soul, as when they'd left.  To deny us, as Americans, the chance through images like this to share the plight of those who are fighting on our behalf elsewhere in the world, is to deny us the chance to share what servicemembers are going through; and to deny them the chance to know that somewhere out there are people who "get," admire and respect the tremendous price they've paid through their service.

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The Marine Corps, which wants to sign more patriotic young sons and daughters up to fight, apparently thinks that by constraining the version of what reality is to just a portion of the whole will keep them happy and us in the dark, and people like this brave guy, the photographer, well, in complete limbo.  Little do they know that the patriots will still fight, but the rest of us could use an education course in compassion, sensitivity and yes, tenderness for those who've fought in battle, that only comes through expanding our horizons, and by facing the whole truth of what they're really going through, as combatants. Don't sugar coat the truth: everyone who goes to war comes back changed -- that's just how it is.  Let's develop a compassion and an understanding for what they go through, not sweep it under the rug.  The death and injury of those with whom they serve is often the most scarring aspect of combat there is.  Just ask those who've never been the same since.

So especially on this Fourth of July, as one extraordinarily talented photojournalist sits in limbo, let's hope still alive, ripped out of the fight for no other reason than that he was getting a little too close to home in showing us what war is really like -- I'm appalled to think that as Americans, we're not being trusted with the whole truth, when it's expressly the whole truth that we need, as Martin Luther King once said, to set us free.  We need to know the human costs of these battles we're in.  And suppressing the images of that just harms our servicemembers and their families, and cripples the compassion of us as a people.

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Until I looked it up just now, I didn't realize that Crosby, Stills and Nash song had other lyrics.  Apparently it does.  Besides the chorus (above), which I remember so well, there's another verse as well:

Daylight again, following me to bed
I think about a hundred years ago, how my fathers bled
I think I see a valley, covered with bones in blue
All the brave soldiers that cannot get older been askin' after you
Hear the past a callin', from Armegeddon's side
When everyone's talkin' and no one is listenin', how can we
decide?

On the behalf of all those "brave soldiers that cannot get older," could we at least not suppress and crush the efforts of those who are trying to get us to see the whole truth?  What truth is that, you may ask?  The very cost of freedom, buried in the ground -- in Iraq, in Afghanistan, and in Vietnam beforehand. Godspeed, Z.  You are a witness on ALL of our behalf, to the price that war really exacts, on those who serve in it.

July 01, 2008

The Art of War - but Not Sun Tzu's: Three B&W Iconic Images from Iraq, Vietnam and Afghanistan Depict War and Its Toll on the Warrior

Zoriah Forgiveness Tattoo

Three images to ponder -- three black and white depictions of war and the veteran:

This first image, by the humanitarian photojournalist Zoriah -- currently in Iraq -- is profound, stark and spectacular.  It is also very recent.  Zoriah narrowly survived a bombing in the Anbar province last Thursday.  This is an image he captured from last Monday -- of a young U.S. soldier.  Zoriah writes: "A couple of days ago I went out on a foot patrol in Sadr City with a young a soldier and noticed the tattoo on his arm, featuring a rosary and the words “Forgive Me.”  I asked him what the story behind it was.

He said, “After my first tour in Iraq, I went back home to the states and all my friends called me a murderer and killer.  I guess I started thinking a lot about all the things I had done over here…you know.”

(Zoriah's blog, filled with inescapably riveting images like this one, is linked here.  Stay safe, Zoriah!)                                               

The second image is of a Vietnam-era veteran, standing, head bowed, in front of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, DC, also known as "The Wall."  It's taken Monument_du_Vietnam_%28Washington_D_C_%29by French Canadian photographer, Patrick-Andre Perron, whose website is here.  Interestingly, on Perron's website, he "illustrates" this photograph with a poem he must particularly like, that he apparently saw on the wall.  We include it here:

"If you are able, save for them a place inside of you and save one backward glance when you are leaving for the places they can no longer go.

Be not ashamed to say you loved them,
though you may or may not have always.
Take what they have taught you with their dying and keep it with your own.

And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane,
take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind."
 

- Major Michael Davis O'Donnell
1 January 1970, Dak To, Vietnam, Listed as KIA February 7, 1978

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Nicholas G Ciccone by Michael D Fay USMC The third image is of Lance Cpl. Nicholas G. Ciccone, USMC, captured by Marine Combat Artist and Warrant Officer Michael D. Fay, whose blog, Fire and Ice, is linked here.  This is a pencil sketch of a young Marine, core-level exhausted after a nine-day firefight in Afghanistan.  Says Fay: This "was the face of Lance Cpl. Ciccone I looked upon inside the freezing gutted remains of Kandahar International Airport in early January 2002. His platoon had just dragged themselves into the terminal building after completing a nine-day combat patrol. They had originally intended to be out for only twelve hours, but found a huge weapons cache and the Taliban wanted it back. I don’t know what happened during those long days, but whatever it was, these Marines had the look. And of them all, Ciccone had it in spades. The drawing shows him the very moment he’s dropped his backpack and removed his helmet. Looking at it now I realize what it was about him — the weight was still there."

Sadly, Lance Cpl. Nicholas G. Ciccone later lost his own battle with PTSD, killing himself in October of 2003. Ciccone's suicide, Fay remarked, "made me acutely aware that not all fatal wounds are physical."

June 10, 2008

Survivors Quilt: Combat Veterans Patch Meaning Together in Quilts about PTSD, War and Loss

Quilt Photos at VA in Seattle

You've heard of survivors' guilt - here we've got survivors' QUILTS.  (Bad pun, I know -- but true.)

We've been talking a bit lately about art therapy, and how combat veterans with PTSD use it successfully to tap into, and work through, some of the pain they feel inside. The photos here, by Mike Kane, at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, are from a story published on March 19 about how the inpatient PTSD program at the VA hospital in Seattle has a "wall" of quilt squares, made by combat veterans, and encouraged by a nurse, Betsy Shapiro (she's at right, above), now retired, who gave deeply hurting veterans 6x6" cotton squares, on which to draw something or paint something that related to their experience: something they could leave behind, to let others know about them and what they had gone through. 

Initially, there was moaning and groaning, and reluctance to comply.  But shortly thereafter, everyone produced something, and the results were really pretty impressive.  The veterans also gave input into how they wanted the resultant squares displayed -- not set in pretty frames, like squares in a regular patchwork quilt might be, but together, side-by-side, touching.  The article, by Mike Barber, is called "Veterans tell stories in patchwork of memories," and it's linked here.

In an earlier article, from the Honolulu Advertiser from October 2, 2007, linked here, Glenn Reys, an Air Force vet in Honolulu worked through his recovery from drugs and alcohol by immersing himself in making a Hawaiian quilt, symbolic of his homeland, but also incorporating patriotric U.S. symbols.  He found himself devoted to the practice, and able to quilt for hours at a time.  "This kept me busy," Reys said. "When I do sewing like this, I can sew for like six or eight hours, and it's no problem. That's what I do in my continuing recovery."

In one of the best articles I've read about a Vietnam vet, Cecil Ison, struggling with PTSD, the author, Kathy Dobie, talks about visiting his home in Kentucky and watching his wife, Bet, a quilter, work on a quilt with Vietnam themes. Cecil and his two brothers all served in combat in Vietnam, and each responded in a different way.  Cecil's wife, Bet, attempted to capture her view of what they suffered in the quilt, turning an abstract -- feelings about the war, and the isolation it produced -- into something very concrete -- the quilt. She says that the quilt is too painful for Cecil to address directly, but through it, she is able to give vent to some of her feelings, about what she has watched her husband and his brothers go through.  Kathy Dobie writes:

[Cecil's wife, Bet, and I are spending time one afternoon.] We’re talking upstairs in the sewing room while she works on her Vietnam quilt. The room is stuffed with fabric: tweeds, cottons, velvets, hundreds of men’s ties. Bet sews at a small table by the window. She listens to oral histories of Vietnam 2428049925_b10a518f99 veterans as she works. On the left side of the quilt is an army-green map of Vietnam, showing the three cities where James, Cecil, and Arnold served. The rest of the quilt is blue, and three male figures float there, separated from one another and bearing labels: anger, despair, and guilt. The quilt reads: "my husband and his brothers came home from vietnam…three islands in an ocean of silence."  James is the Angry one, Cecil the figure of Despair, and Arnold is Guilt.

(This is the quilt in question, pictured to the right.  From top to bottom, you can see "Anger," "Despair," and "Guilt," and "Vietnam" is written lengthwise, on the left.)  Quilt copyright Bet Ison.

Below is another quilt with Vietnam imagery by Bet Ison.  Both quilts are copyright Bet Ison, and property of the author.  Photos are shared with Bet Ison's permission.

2428061461_139b0d92cb


(The article by Kathy Dobie article in GQ, is called "The Long Shadow of War," and we blogged about it earlier, here.  Dobie is also the author of the excellent article in the Nation, recently, called "Denial in the Corps" -- about Marines and the stigma of mental health issues, including PTSD, which we've also blogged about, here.)

Quilting is a uniquely American tradition.  Not that other countries haven't had their own versions of it, but it's uniquely tied up in the "fabric," as it were, of American history.  There are so many examples, from crazy quilts made of just scraps of silk, satin and wool garments, patched together on wagon trains as Americans headed West, to quilts made from flour sacks by pioneer women, to Civil War era "album quilts," to today's photo transfer quilts.  Quilts are often about "making do" with just the materials available, and there's something therapeutic about the needlework involved.  In 1837, American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote in The Scarlet Letter, "Women derive a pleasure, incomprehensible to the other sex, from the delicate toil of the needle."  Well, by the 1970s, even he-men like football great Rosey Grier had picked up the needle, though not necessarily to quilt (he favored needlepoint instead).  Quilting is an unusual 3D art form that combines texture (the fabric, and the stitchwork) with color and design, and has a long and storied American history, besides.  It's interesting that combat veterans and their loved ones would find an outlet for some of their feelings in quilting.  Whether it's a square, a bed quilt, or a wall hanging, quilting allows for freedom of expression, and a form of "art therapy" that may just help those who are hurting to focus and transform their experience into something physical that they can share with others. 

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Editor's Note: If you want to continue this conversation about quilting and paying homage to a combat experience, your own or someone else's, email tributequilts AT gmail DOT com. 

June 09, 2008

"Art Relaxes Me" - Combat Veterans Using Art Therapy to Heal

We've blogged recently about the potential for art therapy to treat combat trauma and PTSD -- not instead of other types of therapy, but in addition to them -- here and here.  One very good article from about a year ago is worth including in the discussion.  The article, by Jackie Spinner, was published April 15, 2007 in the Washington Post, and it's called "War's Pain, Softened with a Brush Stroke" and linked here.  (Spinner herself is the author of, Tell Them I Didn't Cry: A Young Journalist's Story of Joy, Loss and Survival in Iraq, linked here.)  The article talks about how combat veterans have been helped by art therapy, in finding ways to express what's happened to them that brings them a modicum of peace and transformation.  It also talks about the great downturn in the availability of art therapy for PTSD, after its heyday in the 1970s, with the Vietnam war -- which is a shame, because to those it helps, it's really been quite beneficial.  A very few combat veterans are able to take art therapy classes through the VA; but far fewer than in past years, primarily because of budget cuts.  Apparently just like in the public schools, art is one of the first items to be cut when budgets are trimmed. If you read the article, though, you'll gain an appreciation for just what it provides -- and wish more veterans had the opportunity to experience it.  As one injured veteran said, speaking for many, "Art relaxes me..."

May 26, 2008

Making Art from War: Art Therapy as a Treatment for Combat Veterans

PET-image A recent article entitled, "Art Therapy for Combat-Related PTSD: Recommendations for Research and Practice," make the heavily-referenced case that we shouldn't overlook art therapy's potential for treating PTSD in combat veterans -- particularly because of its nonverbal nature, and its ability to integrate and express experience trapped below the level of conscious thought.  Typically, art therapy has been under-studied, or studied with victims of trauma who are children, not combat veterans -- but over time, those facts are changing.  The article, linked here, and referenced in a previous blog post linked here, is well worth reading.

They introduce their argument by saying (citations are everywhere in the original article, I'm leaving them out of this summary) that PTSD is difficult to treat in part because no single treatment has emerged as the clear leader, with effectiveness across the board.  Similarly, PTSD can be somewhat intractable to treat because any trauma severe enough to cause PTSD seems to affect the brain's underlying physiology.  Pharmaceutical drugs and talk therapy, among other treatments, are commonly-used approaches for treating PTSD, but the attractiveness of art therapy as a treatment is expressly because of its non-verbal nature.  It has the potential to allow combat veterans to process and integrate what has happened to them, without specifically requiring them to talk about it -- something many veterans are reluctant to do.

Some interesting points from the article:

PTSD is thought to be caused in part by the nature of traumatic memories, which are encoded in implicit as well as declarative memory systems and are likely to exist primarily as dissociated emotional, perceptual, or sensory fragments with no coherent verbal, symbolic, or temporal basis (O’Kearney & Perrott, 2006; Reisberg & Hertel, 2004).

Furthermore, implicit and declarative memories of an event can become disconnected due to trauma. These qualities of traumatic memory make it hard to describe traumatic experiences in words or to “integrate” them as part of one’s life story (Christianson, 1992; van der Kolk,Hostetler, Herron, & Fisler, 1994). The failure to process information symbolically (verbally or otherwise) after a trauma is thought to be a core element of PTSD (van der Kolk & Fisler, 1995). Indeed, brain imaging research has demonstrated hypoactivity in Broca’s area, which is involved in the motoric aspects of speech, and hyperactivity in the amygdala (fear, anger), hippocampus (memory), and occipital cortex (visual processing), among veterans with PTSD (Rauch & Shin, 1997).

By their nature, traumatic memories are difficult to express in words alone. Non-verbal expression, as is used in art therapy, can facilitate both the shift to declarative memory and the creation of a coherent narrative. The narrative can be pictorial rather than verbal. Indeed, visual imagery may be necessary for the symbolic processing involved in constructing a trauma narrative (van der Kolk & Fisler, 1995).

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Additionally,

Although art therapy has not been extensively researched, a number of small studies of art therapy for veterans with PTSD have yielded promising results. In a study designed to identify which components of a specialized inpatient PTSD program (SIPU) were most effective, Johnson and colleagues (1997) found that art therapy was the only component among 15 standard SIPU components, such as group therapy, drama therapy, community service, anger management, and journaling, that produced the greatest benefits for veterans with the most severe PTSD symptoms. (The other 14 components were most effective for those with the least severe symptoms.) They also found art therapy to be exceptional in that the veterans could tolerate war-zone content during art therapy and could not do so during other activities. The authors surmise that art therapy was more effective than other therapies because it provided pleasurable distraction in conjunction with exposure to difficult content and thus allowed traumatic material to be processed without the negative short-term side effects of verbal introspective interventions. Other studies also have found art therapy to be more effective than verbal therapy for veterans with PTSD. Morgan and Johnson (1995) assessed a drawing task for treating nightmares in combat-related PTSD and found that those who did the drawing task when they were awakened by nightmares had fewer and less intense nightmares than those who did a writing task.

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Editor's Note: To learn more about art therapy, or to find an art therapy practitioner who may have some experience with PTSD (and there could be very few who do), contact the American Art Therapy Association, Inc., 11160-C1 South Lakes Drive, Suite 813, Reston, VA 20191.  Tel.: (888) 290-0878 or
(703) 212-2238.  Their website is linked here.

May 25, 2008

Art Therapy for PTSD

CHILCOTE II Recent research involving children and adolescents with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) indicates that art therapy may be a promising treatment. PTSD is an emotional disorder that may be caused by a one-time traumatic event, such as natural or man-made disaster, or by repeated traumatic experiences such as physical abuse, community violence, or maltreatment. Children and adolescents respond differently to trauma-inducing events than do adults and often display PTSD symptoms through creative expression such as drawing, painting, play, or storytelling.

In the latest issue of Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association,Francie Lyshak-Stelzer, ATR-BC, LCAT, Creative Arts Supervisor at Bronx Children’s Psychiatric Center, NY, and colleagues report the results of a study to determine if trauma-focused art therapy (TF-ART) reduced symptoms of PTSD in adolescents in an inpatient psychiatric facility. When compared to a group of adolescents who participated in a standard arts-and-crafts activity protocol, the youth who received the TFART group sessions had a greater reduction in PTSD symptoms as measured by a widely used trauma reaction index. Lyshak-Stelzer notes that while these results must be replicated in other studies, the current findings look promising. In the same issue of Art Therapy, Ohio art therapist Rebekah Chilcote [see photo] describes her work with child survivors of the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka. The small island nation, just off the coast of India, was one of the hardest hit with over 30,000 people killed in the disaster. Chilcote observes, “The children’s artwork revealed traumatic tsunami experiences, the importance of family, loss of loved ones, and religious and cultural heritage.

Tasks, such as ‘the day I will never forget’ helped these children express their feelings about the events.” Chilcote has also provided art therapy to children in Africa and Cleveland, OH. Art therapists have been central to disaster relief efforts worldwide, including work with child survivors of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. They continue to provide much-needed services to the Gulf Coast region of the US.

For information about art therapy, please visit the AATA website, linked here. The American Art Therapy Association, Inc., was founded in 1969 and develops and promotes educational, professional, and ethical standards for the practice of art therapy. The AATA provides information to its members and the public regarding the field of art therapy through publications, a scholarly journal, and an annual conference.

February 21, 2008

"Shattered Soldier" - the Artist's Description

Portrait_w_shattered_soldier_by_mis

John Paul Hornbeck says his "Shattered Soldier" sculpture took about 500-600 hours to build, and probably cost at least that much in supplies.  "I went for realism," he says, "I wanted people to feel the psychological/emotional impact of being a soldier with PTSD."

The sculpture, shown here partially dismantled for shipment, head removed, was fabricated from an assortment of (inert) grenades, 50 caliber bullets, shrapnel, magazine clips, mini bombs, tank shells, mortars, and bomb fragments, for realism.  Hornbeck says he's spent hundreds of hours as a child with his father, a Vietnam veteran, at the VA for treatment, listening to the stories of his father's generation of veterans, telling stories about the Vietnam war.  Hornbeck himself served in the Army.  He says, "Many soldiers have stories about a piece of shrapnel they carry in their limbs.  That is why I used shrapnel to be part of the limbs in designing my soldier."

The sculpture is life-sized and at least as heavy as a real soldier.  Hornbeck says that it includes "at least 200-300 .50 caliber bullet tips that were tumbled, cleaned, drilled and strung up on aircraft wire, with splices of barbed wire, to form the ribs.  The torso is made out of a six-gallon gas tank.  Brass tank shells form the legs.  The tank shells couldn't be welded directly; instead, they were drilled, fitted with angle brackets, and welded to the mortar "feet" and ammo box "hip" at the base of the sculpture.  The M-16 magazines were cut in half, length-wise, and drilled so that wire could be woven through them to stitch them in place as the shoulder and collarbones."  "As you can see, the arms are grenades," he says, "Two dozen grenades that have been quartered and welded back together (so that they're fragmented, but also to reassure the public that there's no longer any powder inside.).  The fractured head is made from a brass drum cymbal, which is shattered into at least 80 puzzle-sized pieces to resemble both shrapnel and skull fractures (typical combat injuries), each drilled with several holes so that they could be woven together with wire to form a type of chain mail.  There are also more grenade pieces, mini bomblets, and the tailfin of a rocket."  A side view of the sculpture, he says, "shows you where it gets its name: the fractured skull represents brain injuries."  The legs bear many of the previous names for PTSD, "particularly in wars before it was diagnosed as a mental illness.  Vietnam was really the first war that gave it a name and a treatment."

Hornbeck hopes that the sculpture succeeds in capturing what many soldiers experience when they return from war: PTSD, survivors' guilt, flashbacks.  He says he was compelled to build it on receiving news of three comrades who'd returned from war and taken their own lives.  Hornbeck wanted the sculpture to deal with "issues directly affecting our vets: like lowering their suicide rates and trying to re-integrate them into society when they return."  Says Hornbheck, "these aren't new issues, they aren't propaganda -- these are issues that have been deal with in every way, though somehow people forget them after those wars are past, only to rediscover them again with the next war.  This makes for a very poor learning curve for both society and the VA to have to deal with thes