Broken Wings No. 7

Broken Wings No. 7

Broken Wings is one of our hands-on projects that celebrates each unique participant as valuable and necessary to a thriving community. The work involves a collective process reminiscent of a quilting bee, as staff and family members gather to help residents sponge paint. We would like to thank Evergreen Terrace Assisted Living in Big Rapids, Michigan, for the opportunity to collaborate and make new friends.

Are you interested in exploring creative possibilities for your senior retirement community? Contact Pamela.

Releasing Hope

Artist Pamela Alderman with participants and Broken Wings No. 7 project

Broken Wings No. 7

Intergenerational Healing Art

A collaborative work with Evergreen Terrace Assisted Living, the local community, and artist Pamela Alderman

Monarch butterflies migrate from Canada to Mexico every autumn. Millions of delicate butterflies complete the dangerous, 3,000 mile journey in spite of severe weather, pesticides, and habitat loss. On the first day of this project, while sponge-painting with the third-graders from Brookside Elementary School, we discussed the butterflies’ journey and how, like the monarchs, each of us needs to be resilient as we push through many obstacles in life.

Scientists believe the butterflies have some sort of internal mechanism that guides them to the Sierra Madre Mountains. Some butterflies even end up on the same exact trees where their ancestors roosted. For day two, while painting with multiple ages from Lighthouse Homeschool Co-op, we talked about following our own internal compass and making wise choices.

Allied Health high school students from Mecosta-Osceola Career Center gathered to help tear the sponge-painted papers over the next two days. Then we glued the torn pieces into butterfly designs. The collective process of this artwork, which included the Evergreen Terrace residents, family members, and these various community groups, portrayed the butterfly’s life cycle and our need for community in order to flourish.

Throughout the winter, the monarchs huddle together on the trees to stay warm. They need one another for survival. Likewise, throughout our intergenerational art project, we experienced the power of engagement within a loving community. Such connections can help heal our deepest wounds. Healing releases hope, and we gain a new sense of strength to weather life’s uncertainties and to complete the journey.

Are you interested in exploring creative possibilities for your senior retirement community? Contact Pamela.

Read the inspirational story behind Senior Care Projects…

ArtPrize 2020 Veteran Art Workshops

Working on Yellow Ribbon for ArtPrize 2020

While preparing for ArtPrize 2020, Pamela will lead art workshops with Kent County Veterans Services. These workshops will be sponsored by various West Michigan veteran organizations listed below. At the workshops, veterans and their families will sponge-paint special metallic paper, which the artist will use to fashion the ArtPrize work. A special collection of eight focus-paintings created by veterans will be selected and incorporated into the overall design. All workshop participants are invited to create unique paintings.

Veterans and their families are welcome to participate in the following workshops:

Blue Star Mothers of Ionia, Kent and Montcalm and Ray I Booth American Legion
Saturday, March 7, 2020, 12-2 p.m.
Contact the Blue Star Mothers for event details

Ottawa-North Kent Blue Star Mothers and Marne American Legion
Sunday, March 8, 2020, 2-4 p.m.
Contact the Blue Star Mothers for event details

92 For 22
Saturday, March 21, 2020, Open House 5-7:30 p.m.
Contact 92 For 22 for event details

Finish the Mission Veteran Relief Fund (Location TBD)
Sunday, March 22, 2020, 2:30 – 4:30pm

Kent County seal

Kent County Veteran Services is partnering with Yellow Ribbon for ArtPrize 2020

Broken

“My Family Sold Me” Broken – Watercolor painting by Pamela Alderman

Artist Pamela Alderman

BROKEN: After exhibit visitors shared their experiences, I finally realized the progression between sexting, sexual assaults, and suicidal tendencies. Like one individual said, “Eventually, one thing leads to the next.”

SEXTING: “My boyfriend pressured me into texting a nude picture of myself. I tapped ‘send’—he uploaded my images to the internet.” – 7th-grader

PORNOGRAPHY: “Realizing how many pornography models aren’t there by choice, it changes how one views pornography. It’s no longer entertainment.” – Businessman

RAPE: “First, my boyfriend raped me. Then his dad took a turn.” – High school student

SEX TRAFFICKING: “My dad sold me for sex to the men in his office from the time I was two until I was five.” – Young mom

SUICIDE: “It all started with one private message. But eventually, one thing led to the next.” – 43-year-old

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 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