Redemptive Art

Swatches of red denim for use in Red Jeans Redemption project

The catalytic response from visitors surrounding my ArtPrize work caught the attention of the internationally known artist Makoto Fujimura. In 2014, Mako wrote, “Pamela Alderman’s installation The Scarlet Cord at the Ford Presidential Museum is attracting thousands. Her work of paintings combined with participatory, Yoko Ono-like installations hit home, and the lines for her exhibit grew longer every day. What Pamela experienced, and what ArtPrize made possible, is an extraordinary success by any measure.”

Through Mako’s insights, I have continued to expand my work, which taps into the healing power of art to help individuals flourish. He also helped me hone my creative interests and messaging. Mako’s contribution has made a major difference in my community-based art by helping the work to advance beyond ArtPrize.

Before meeting Mako, I had packed away my paint brushes for fifteen years. Instead of art, it was a time for spiritual grounding, while learning how to apply positive life principles in everyday ways to benefit others. Now, as an artist, I’m using what I learned then to support friends, neighbors, and strangers through my redemptive art.

Robert Schumann, a German composer, said an artist’s duty is “to send light into the darkness of men’s hearts.” As an artist of the soul, I’m learning how to cultivate exhibits that focus on empathy and compassion. Such work addresses our universal brokenness, but it also reflects a bit of my own story.

At thirty-four, I found out the most powerful man I knew had suddenly died. Enormous grief pulled me out to sea like a riptide. Wasn’t I too young to bury my father?

After my dad’s death, I finally realized I had this white-knuckled grip on how I wanted my life to work out; I wanted a storybook family that goes sailing on Sunday afternoons. My childhood dream capsized, though, when my parents divorced and my family broke apart. I found myself drowning in the deep water, trying to control the wreckage and stay afloat. Those pain-saturated decades, the parts I can talk about and the parts I can’t, seep out through my art.

Whether it’s attaching a scrap of red jeans to help raise awareness for sex trafficking, or releasing a personal struggle by writing a “let go” statement, or writing a note to a veteran coping with PTSD, military sexual assault, or veteran suicide—elements of a future 2020 work—each installation creates a nurturing space that invites hope. Because of my past pain, I believe art has a unique potential to touch the deep places within the human spirit, and interactive art, especially art that offers healing, draws people into a place of restoration.

Red Jeans Redemption Collaborates

Audience at Red Jeans Redemption live painting event

Red Jeans Redemption

Curating the strength of survivors and displaying hope

The Red Jeans Redemption project gives voice to the hidden stories of sexual abuse, rape, and sex trafficking. The work is comprised of the stories from courageous survivors who volunteered to write their sacred stories on the red jeans. Leslie King, survivor and founder of Sacred Beginnings, and the women in her program also participated.

In February of 2020, Red Jeans Redemption had the privilege to collaborate with S.E.E. Freedom Now, the organizer of Story Collective. The event started with a pair of red jeans being torn, representing the damage inflicted upon the victim’s soul through the commercial sex industry. Along with the debut of Red Jeans Redemption, the audience’s responses, written on scraps of red jeans, were incorporated on a canvas during a live painting performance.

This performance concluded with artists Anna Donahue, Susan Anderson, and Pamela Alderman pouring gold paint along the seams of the torn jean scraps. The gold paint represented the healing redemption that occurs when we come together to help mend the sexual brokenness of our society.

Artists Susan Anderson, Pamela Alderman, and Anna Donahue at Red Jeans Redemption live painting event

To schedule Red Jeans Redemption for your event, contact Pamela Alderman

Photo credit: Laura Chittenden

Red Jeans Redemption Story

Red Jeans Redemption: red jeans on fence

“I just couldn’t let it out,” said a 63-year-old woman, whom I’ll call Trudy. So, for years, the repeated childhood molestation remained hidden.

Sometimes shame, guilt, and fear keep secrets—hush hush. Before #MeToo, generations of women often suffered without a voice. They had no platform to talk about what happened to them.

After viewing The Scarlet Cord exhibit during ArtPrize 2014, dozens of older women dropped their heads on my shoulder and quietly wept. Even though the exhibit specifically highlighted sex trafficking awareness, the audience expanded the work to include childhood molestation and date rape.

I wondered, How many from those voiceless generations, women in their 60s, 70s, and 80s, never told their story of abuse for the sake of protecting family members? Because the validity of their story would be questioned? These forgotten women, hiding decades of dirty secrets, never had a chance to process their trauma.

Through an art encounter, though, many of these women found a sort of release. Somehow the artwork touched something deep within the human spirit. After viewing the art, their secrets started spilling out.

My recent work about sexual trauma, Red Jeans Redemption, addresses this missing narrative. This project gives voice to all women as they record their stories of abuse on a pair of red jeans. As I sat in the kitchen with Trudy, her secret, which started when she was only 6 years old, manifested itself through an art project.

But the initial healing had actually started a few weeks before, as an elderly family member lay dying. In those sacred moments, Trudy got down on her knees and took her perpetrator’s hand. Then she broke shame’s power: “Dad, I forgive you for what you did to me.”

Trudy’s redemption moment came during a confrontation—adult to adult—with her childhood abuser, her own father. When Trudy began to talk about the past, the healing process started. After decades of silence, Trudy finally let it out.

Pamela’s art acknowledges #MeToo anger and responds by offering women a space to experience healing and peace.

Maria Fee, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Theology and Culture Fuller Theological Seminary

Healing in Art’s awareness exhibits consist of a variety of multimedia installations. Every work represents both the pain and the potential of each girl and boy enslaved in the commercial sex industry. Inspirational stories connect the audience to real survivors and encourage the healing process. Each exhibit can be expanded to include our Healing in Arts Station, with hands-on activities and community resources on how to get involved. For further educational opportunities, our presentation and film connect viewers to this social problem. Combined, these various pieces make the exhibit a more complete experience.

Red Jeans Redemption: Live Art Response

Red Jeans Redemption

Pamela Alderman with SEE Freedom

The Red Jeans Redemption exhibit gives voice to the hidden stories of sexual abuse, rape, and sex trafficking. This community-based work involves multiple layers of participation. First, several individuals donated funds or bought red jeans and left them on my front porch. Next, a couple of sexual abuse therapists agreed to make the project available to their clients.

One counselor wrote her own rape story on a pair of red jeans and hung them on her office wall. As clients noticed the jeans, they asked if they could participate by writing their stories too. To keep up with the increasing interest, we developed a rotation system: When the counselors returned the finished jeans, I dropped off or mailed additional jeans. Several women from Sacred Beginnings, a nonprofit that rescues victims of sexual exploitation, also recorded their sacred stories.

In February, the Red Jeans Redemption exhibit will be expanded to include Pamela’s live painting performance with an opportunity for audience engagement. For this segment, audience members will write ways they can help end exploitation on scraps of red denim. Then, Pamela, along with Anna Donahue and Susan Anderson, will incorporate the audience’s responses into a large canvas painting (detail from example painting shown). This live collaborative experience will remind visitors of the healing redemption found when shame and secrets are released and met with a compassionate response.

Join Us for Story Collective On February 25, 2020

Story Collective: A Night for Freedom curates an artistic gathering to support the work to create a future free from human trafficking for thousands in our community.

Story Collective will gather community members to showcase a new art exhibition by Pamela Alderman, the Red Jeans Redemption Project, an art experience which gives voice to survivors of exploitation. The red jeans display anonymous stories from survivors. This night we will learn together and participate in a live art response to the problem of exploitation.

Date:
Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Time:
6:15 PM – 8:30 PM EST

Location:
The Lit
61 Sheldon Avenue Southeast
Grand Rapids, MI 49503

Tickets:
$55

The Season to Give

Children creating interactive art projects in school workshop

What do you do with that loose change leftover from coffee dates? Or the unexpected $10 discovered in your coat pocket? Here’s a challenge: Empower someone else through hands-on art with your small gift of money. At Healing in Arts, our donor-supported work transforms human brokenness into opportunities for growth and wellness through interactive art.”

Artist and facilitator Pamela Alderman creates a new kind of community-based art that invites audience collaboration. This participatory art lets others speak and respond. As individuals or groups engage with artmaking through social justice art exhibits, school workshops, or community programs, many attest to the restorative power of art.

Pamela and her team witness this healing time after time. She recalls an incident at The Scarlet Cord installation, an exhibit that raises sex-trafficking awareness. “In response to The Scarlet Cord, a student fell into my arms. I held her as she cried. Little by little her story came: At 13, she had been raped by an older adult and another teen. Pain and devastation marked her young life.” The participatory art helped activate the healing process and gave the young teen an opportunity to release some of the hurt by verbalizing her story.

Young woman viewing The Scarlet Cord in Phoenix

As visitors interact with the work, they often identify their pain, and in some cases, they begin talking about deep wounds for the first time. The result? Participants experience healing—bit by bit—through redemptive art.

By serving others and encouraging soul care, we help unlock people and move them towards human flourishing or personal well-being. Your financial investment—large or small—plays a huge role in healing brokenness and restoring hope. Join our Healing in Arts team today!

Join Our Team!
We would be so grateful!

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Recovering from Sexual Abuse

Wounded - Mixed media art and part of The Scarlet Cord installation

Tammy’s Story

Survivors often begin to experience healing when they finally acknowledge the sexual abuse. Over time, some even reach the point when they can let go of the guilt and shame. These first bold steps often end up sparking hope. This inspirational story occurred at The Scarlet Cord exhibit:

While I was raising awareness for sex trafficking at The Scarlet Cord, a young woman I call Tammy asked for one of the scarlet cords that we gave away to exhibit visitors. As I tied a cord on Tammy’s wrist, she burst into tears. The sexual abuse, she said, had lasted for years during her childhood.

“The shame and the guilt of your sexual abuse,” I said, “belongs to your perpetrators. The individuals who committed the crimes against you. The shame and the guilt doesn’t belong to you.”

Tammy’s perpetrator, a teacher, had told her that she had invited the abuse by being seductive. “His accusations are part of the abuse,” I explained. “Children don’t solicit sexual abuse; children are the victims.”

A month later, one of Tammy’s friends emailed me to thank me for reaching out to her. The friend wrote, “Ever since that night when we met at The Scarlet Cord, Tammy has been feeling encouraged.”

Tammy’s first bold steps for healing gave her a sense of new beginnings.

Find out more about The Scarlet Cord exhibit.

Note: The name and some details have been changed to protect identities.

The Scarlet Cord: Awareness and Healing for Sex Trafficking and Sexual Abuse

The Scarlet Cord elements

The Scarlet Cord presentation—comprised of a film, gallery collection, and interactive exhibit—is designed to raise awareness and inspire healing for sexual abuse survivors or those negatively impacted by the commercial sex industry. The Scarlet Cord popup exhibit contains an abstract painting series portraying the victims’ voices that have been interpreted from audio sound waves to 2D paintings.

This series is part of a twenty-five piece gallery collection. In addition, 3D optional responsive pieces, Life Words or The Scarlet Web, invite an interactive collaboration between artist and visitors. These engaging works let others speak and respond. The multi-dimensional modular components, or a special custom work created especially for your event, fit into open or closed spaces. Pamela also has coached high school and college students in creating their own unique projects.

Book The Scarlet Cord for Your Next Event…

Pamela’s collaborative and interactive art is donor supported.
You can get involved, donate securely on the Patreon web site.