Unveiling Hope Quilts

A Healing in Arts Collaboration with Girls Court

Hope Quilts project on display

Quilting has been part of American history for many generations. Quilts carry narratives, family connections, and lifelong traditions, but they also reflect feelings of love and originality. This Healing in Arts project, with artists Pamela Alderman and Kameko Madere, draws inspiration from the quilt patterns passed down from generation to generation through the women quilters of Gee’s Bend, Alabama, and honors their art. The work encourages participants to see all people like individual quilts, sewn together by the fabric of hopes and dreams.

Hope Quilts project workshop
Hope Quilts project workshop

Our History with Girls Court

Each year, since we first connected at the Let Go ArtPrize exhibit in 2017, Healing in Arts has facilitated an art workshop with the incarcerated teens at Girls Court and Judge Patricia Gardner. This year California artist Kameko Madere, one of my fellow graduate students at Azusa Pacific University and a Healing in Arts board member, created the concept for this particular project. We held the first Hope Quilt workshop in Michigan. As we passed out the art supplies—fabric, wooden panels, and glue—to the teens, the probation officers, and the judge, one of the girls said, “You give us so many options to choose from.” At Healing in Arts, we try to provide ample art materials to make each participant feel valued and included. We want to communicate that we care about each person through our words, our actions, our attitudes, and the art making process.

Hope Quilts project workshop
Hope Quilts project workshop

After a fun evening of creating the Hope Quilts project, a few of the teens gave this feedback:

The art project relieved any stress I’d had.
It was something positive I got to do and be creative.
Being able to be creative in a different way than normal.
It was fun.

Something to Think About

How can you use your passion and talents to inspire or encourage others?

 

Healing in ArtsHealing in Arts creates art experiences to build hope, care, and connection in under-served communities, including special needs kids, incarcerated teens, sex trafficked youth, First Nations people in Canada, veterans with PTSD, and the elderly.

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Letting Go

Close-up of hand written Let Go statements

A Daughter’s Story

More than one hundred participants submitted “Let Go” sentences to be collaged onto my ArtPrize Nine painting. But one woman caught my attention when she wrote this statement: “Mom, I’m letting go of my expectations of what our relationship should look like. I forgive you for the pain you caused, and I release you from any responsibility to heal me.”

Her profound statement, “I release you from any responsibility to heal me,” compelled me to contact her to see if she would share more of her story. She agreed. The following vignette shows her progression from heartache to healing. The Let Go journey is always difficult but never impossible.

Mom,

You said I shouldn’t be affected by your decision to divorce my dad. What you didn’t realize was that you not only closed yourself off from Dad, but from me as well. When you shut yourself away in your room and told me not to bother you, I learned that I no longer had a mother to depend on; I had to fend for myself.

When I left for work one day, you changed the locks to prevent my dad from coming in. But you didn’t realize—you locked me out too. Over and over, you chose your “freedom” and your “own” path over me. Your choices cut a deep wound in my heart.

One day, I realized you would probably never apologize; I needed to forgive you, or my bitterness would end up consuming me. I had to accept you for being you, instead of wishing you were some other mom.

Mom, I’m letting go of my expectations of what our relationship should look like. I forgive you for the pain you caused, and I release you from any responsibility to heal me.

Love,
Your daughter

This is one of the stories that inspired the Let Go exhibit.

Note: Some details have been changed to protect identities.

Open Hands: The Story Behind the Story

Open Hands collage of hand trace drawings

Celebrate with us! We reached our first goal of 1000 handprints!

Art is one way, or solution, to work through some of my own dilemmas or emotional scars. My art supports the tension of being in process and moving forward. Over the years, this work has evolved from static art hanging on a wall to vibrant interactive healing spaces involving others.

For example, I created Let Go, which showcased during ArtPrize 2017 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, as a positive step to work through a personal situation where I felt stuck—unable to let go of debilitating thoughts and emotions. By being vulnerable and willing to put my work out there, 70,000 ArtPrize visitors joined me on the creative healing journey by writing their own let go notes. The interactive public art helped many work through personal challenges, and countless individuals, besides myself, experienced emotional or spiritual freedom.

My latest work, Open Hands, an interactive traveling art experiment, is no exception. The work, first inspired by Babette’s Feast—a fictional story about a refugee’s plight, is about opening our fists in times of struggle and lending a hand to others. Like Babette, I am learning how to overcome adversity by redirecting my attention to the needs of others.

Writing message on Open Hands drawing

Here’s a bit of my backstory

When I was 19, my parents divorced. Our once bustling home was decimated overnight. My dad physically checked out; my mother emotionally checked out.

During school breaks, I found my childhood home completely empty. While wandering from room to room, each space felt silent—vacant. So, not only was I learning to deal with my parent’s divorce, but now deep loneliness crept into my life.

Sometimes, because of the isolation, I just sat on the floor and cried. The never-ending cycle of aloneness overwhelmed me. Finally, after a few months of constantly spiraling downward, I realized that in order to survive I needed a change. So, I left my Michigan home and moved to Southern California.

At first, the new adventure sparked hope, but I didn’t realize that my deep grief and debilitating depression would follow me all the way to the West Coast. My daily phone calls to my mom often ended with her repeating this mantra: “Get your thoughts off yourself, and do something nice for someone else.”

With nothing to lose, I decided to give my mom’s solution a try. When someone was sitting alone in the school cafeteria, I asked them to join me. When my grandmother sent homemade cookies, I shared them with my roommates. I also ended up assisting a schizophrenic patient during meal times through a volunteer school program at Camarillo State Hospital.

My mom’s wise counsel, at the time, was hard to understand. But looking back, she was helping me learn how to cope. She was teaching me to replace the inward focus on my own negative circumstances with an outward focus—benefiting others. While grieving my broken family was healthy and necessary, my traumatic experiences opened my heart and my art to the sorrows and needs of others.

Years later, I realized that, like me, so many others are stuck in hurtful situations. Brokenness is part of life. Illness, stress, loss, divorce, and suicide continue to interrupt our lives. Perhaps focusing our attention on others won’t solve all our problems, but overcoming the “selfie” attitude will help alleviate some of them.

Open Hands drawing with forgiveness message

Open Hands encourages closing our phones and opening our hands to the needs of others. The work calls for resiliency—growing through adversity, bouncing back, and learning to thrive for the wellbeing of others. Open Hands is about embracing brokenness through redemption and hope—by being part of the solution.

Where in the world is Open Hands? Follow on Instagram to find out and help reach the second goal of 2,500 handprints.

Join Our Team: Be a Part of Something Big

What We Do

We create spaces where visitors feel personally cared for and validated. Our healing work has touched thousands of ArtPrize visitors—one person at a time (ArtPrize is a huge art event held in Grand Rapids, Michigan). Last year, 70,000 ArtPrize visitors participated with our soul healing artwork by writing Let Go notes.

Your Healing Stories

An ArtPrize visitor wrote: “I will be clean from crack cocaine sixteen years. Finally letting go!”

A mom wrote: “I want my son back. I feel like watching his internal battle is slowly killing me. I’m now choosing to let go of my lack of control. I need to take this step for my own emotional healing.”

A third grader wrote: “I am letting go of perfection because I want to be myself—the self that is not perfect!”

A son wrote: “Dad, you’re supposed to protect me from people like you. All I ever wanted was your love and approval. My heart longs for a real father.”

Our Next Challenge

This year’s interactive work will address bullying and school shootings by starting a Butterfly Effect—where one positive action impacts another positive action—to help better our world.

Make a Difference

We would love for you to be part of this journey. Since our art is very much collaborative and interactive, we would like to invite you to be part of our team for ArtPrize…and beyond. We would be so grateful for your help. Come join our team! Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Let Go: Forgiveness

Several people have attested to the healing they experienced as they wrote their Let Go statements at ArtPrize. We challenged the audience to write a note and then to release the crumpled paper. As their notes symbolically became one with the painting—mixing with the waves and being carried out to sea, many experienced a new level of peace.

One man shared his experience of personal growth at ArtPrize. The Let Go exercise helped him to realize that he had buried a grudge for decades. But in writing the Let Go note, the tide finally turned, marking a new point for him. As a result, he experienced a tranquil place of soul healing—at an art exhibit.

How has letting go freed you? Share it #LetGo

To learn more, visit watercolorbypamela.com…

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Let Go: Children Respond

Life’s ebb and flow eventually may bring us to a healing place. At times, we may feel like we’re drowning in the sea of despair, defeat, or disappointment. But transformation can occur if we are willing to accept change.

ArtPrize visitors were invited to write a couple of words on the vellum paper to identify their struggle—the thing that was weighing them down—like control, fear, unforgiveness, etc. Many discovered that just writing a few words helped activate the healing process. Even the children got involved. Don’t miss some of the funny, but profound, responses from these kids.

What is one thing that you need to Let Go of? Share your story #LetGo

To learn more, visit watercolorbypamela.com…

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Let Go: Releasing

Many participants wrote Let Go statements about difficult relationships. Interactive healing art invites honest reflection. And as a result, many ArtPrize visitors experienced a new level of freedom as they begin to Let Go of the things that weighed them down or dragged them under.

Here’s a peek into one woman’s story:

“I am letting go of all the hurt my husband has put me through. I know he doesn’t mean it. But it still makes my heart bleed. Signed, your wife”

What is your Let Go story? Share your story #LetGo

To learn more, visit watercolorbypamela.com…

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!