This week’s session was about trauma and art, and Joyce led us through various artists who have had trauma in their lives and have used their art to heal.
First she spoke about Jackson Pollock and his psychoanalytic drawings he did in therapy for his alcoholism. She spoke about how you can bring out your subconscious through art. While he was sober, Pollock did drip paintings, which was considered abstract expressionism, and he flung the paint onto the floor and released his energy. He and his wife Lee Krasner were action painters.
Krasner dealt with Pollock’s tragic death with her art, and she used her whole body in a sort of rhythmic dance while painting while she created. She said that you can’t have a plan or control it, and that the art is like a force or energy that moves through you. It’s a form of surrender.
Hilma af Klint, a Swedish artist, used to paint landscapes and portraits. Then she loses her sister and began to make abstract art after this trauma. There were seances that were performed around Hilma, and she did paintings that came automatically through her while she painted without questioning anything.
Yayoi Kusama is a Japanese artist who does everything from fashion to mosaics to performance art and paintings and drawings. She was unfortunately abused as a child; her mother asked her to spy on her father while he was cheating on her mother. Her mother also made it known that she didn’t approve of Kusama’s art and often tore it apart. Kusama had a psychotic break as a teen, and began seeing dots, which she incorporates into her art. She now perminantely resides in a mental health facility in Japan and creates art in a nearby studio.
Frida Kahlo had a bus accident at the age of 18 and a metal rod went through her pelvis. She had 40 surgeries throughout her lifetime, and died young. She was able to paint in bed while she was healing.
Pablo Picasso created art that showed the suffering of the world. One of his paintings is of the Weeping Woman, which showed what the world is feeling, and another is his famous Guernica, which shows the horrors of war.


