Artful recoveries
Deirdre Newman
When Andrew Salazar used to get angry, he would use drugs.
He was eventually arrested for using drugs, selling drugs and
committing grand theft, and sent to live at Phoenix Academy of Orange
County, part of Phoenix House, a national substance abuse treatment
organization.
Now when the 17-year-old feels a burst of anger coming on, he
lights some incense, listens to music or plays with his dog.
Andrew, a soft-spoken teenager with a goatee and braces, credits
his transformation to Art & Creativity for Healing, a program that
helps people deal with negative emotions and traumatic experiences
through painting.
“It makes you have a new strength when you’re drawing,” Andrew
said. “It’s a new way to use the [negative] feeling.”
Laurie Zagon created Art & Creativity for Healing as a nonprofit
in November 2000 after running it as a volunteer effort for more than
10 years. It serves more than 6,000 children, teens and adults in
Orange and Los Angeles counties.
Phoenix House offers a basic and advanced art class for its
clients who live at the academy in Santa Ana and another class for
those that have finished the live-in program and are back in their
own communities. One Tuesday a month, the former live-in clients and
some of their parents go to the Country Inn by Ayres for the artistic
sessions.
DRAWING FROM WITHIN
At the start of each session, facilitator Steve Kittell leads the
students through a warm-up exercise of writing four feelings they’re
feeling on a white piece of paper and then painting them, using a
different color for each one.
Some approach their canvas like Jackson Pollack would, randomly
splattering paint here and there. Others use their cotton swabs and
sponge paintbrushes more delicately, creating distinct figures and
shapes.
One student painted ram horns to illustrate feeling stubborn. Many
used red and black, which are common colors for representing anger,
Kittell said.
When they were done, volunteers displayed their paintings on a
board in the front of the room and Kittell asked them to share a
little bit about the feelings they painted.
Then it was on to the main painting of the evening. Kittell asked
the students to draw a painting called “My Anger.” And this time, he
gave them carte blanche to use as many colors as they wanted.
“Several of you said you had some anger,” Kittell said. “I want
you to get in touch with a time you were really angry. Hear the
sounds and feel the feelings. How does it come out?”
To enhance the reflective mood, Kittell put on some music that
started out as turbulent as the emotion he was asking them to convey.
Many of the students started coating their entire paper in black
paint. Others drew symbols like a skull and crossbones.
EXPRESSIVE ART
Volunteers put the students’ work on easels, and when the students
discussed their work, they delved deeper into their feelings.
“I didn’t like doing it because I didn’t think my painting would
express enough what I wanted to put down,” said Sarah Escobar, 19,
who came to Phoenix House to overcome her negative attitude and drug
abuse.
“I just don’t like feeling like I’ve been left so when I felt that
way, I get pretty mad.”
Eddie Savidan, 18, who went to Phoenix Academy for help with
ditching school, getting drunk and fighting, first looked on the art
program with disdain. He preferred using his body as a canvas for
tattoos instead of painting.
After four months in the program, though, Savidan has grown to
enjoy it. And he appreciates the positive effect it is having on him.
“I honestly think it helps out kids who need someone to reach out
to,” Savidan said.
Savidan’s mother, Michelle, is one of the parents in the class.
The parents do the same painting exercises as their children. She
said she has seen a dramatic change in her son’s demeanor since he
began painting.
“It helps in the process of him getting over his tough exterior
and being angry to getting in touch with his emotions and knowing
it’s OK to feel,” she said.
Adriana Ibarra, 18, enjoys the artistic therapy so much that she
uses the little art books the students get from the class as drawing
journals, she said.
“When I was at Phoenix House, I got all angry because I didn’t
want to go [there],” she said. “Then I would get my anger out through
art.”
Even the Phoenix Academy re-entry/live-out counselor Jeron Jones
gets in on the artistic action. He takes the class to help him deal
with the emotional challenges of counseling the students in the
class, he said.
“I’m the sponge that soaks up their issues and problems,” Jones
said. “I need to find a way to release that.”
Many of the students agree that the more often they paint their
emotions, the easier it is to deal with them.
“I’m really in touch with my anger,” said David Jones, 18. “I can
pinpoint it and see what’s making me mad.”
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