“I Am…” Graduation Show 2021

Story Cloths, Summer 2021

Storycloth class is a summer elective where students learn about narrative textiles as an art therapy intervention. This class focuses on traditional storycloths and the healing aspects of creating with hand stitching and fabric. This summer’s storycloths depict personal stories, fairytales, and stories from current events.

Counseling and Art Therapy Process, Theory Series

These Series of artworks represent psychological theories that are used in therapy, illustrating the integration of art and psychology that is art therapy. Student art therapists chose an art form to create a piece for each theory, ending with their own theory at this time in their art therapy careers. Congratulations to our 2021 graduates!

“I Am … ” Graduation Exhibit 2021

Human Development Masks 2020

These masks were made in fulfillment of a class assignment for “Human Development: Child and Adolescent” in Fall 2020.  The class topic was identity development during adolescence.  Student were instructed to make a plaster mask, either through putting wet plaster directly on their own faces, or by using a plastic form.  Students then embellished the dried masks to symbolically represent part or parts of their own identities.  This class is taught by Stacey Nelson and Deni Brancheau.

Storycloths 2020

Storycloth class is a summer elective. This class focuses on traditional storycloths, ways of making narrative textiles and the healing aspects of creating with hand stitching and fabric. These amazing storycloths depict personal stories, cultural stories and stories from current events.

Faculty Wall — Lindsey Vance

The artworks presented in this gallery are a select four pieces of Lindsey Vance’s (arTestimony) from the God’s and Angel’s collection. These works were created as an introduction to Artistic Alchemy, a creative collection from artists arTestimony and B/ue Robin. We are contemporary artists with two very distinct styles and creative processes, which allows us to complement one another when showing together.

The collection showcases a series of mix-media paintings anchored in spiritual vision with the theme of love and loss. Each artist experienced the loss of their mothers at young ages which has been integral in shaping their art and life missions. This collection elicits an emotional response from viewers and the artists alike with a focus on healing and understanding the divine immersed in love. The duo creates abstract paintings with figurative elements that are alive with color, texture, and glowing elements.

The four pieces selected to share are titled, Ariel: Lioness of God- a piece dedicated to grounding and mindfulness in the healing process (24×36” Oil on Canvas);  Gabriel: Blow Your Horn- a nod to the majesty of music and sounds of healing and my early trumpet playing days (24×30” Acrylic and Mixed Media on Canvas (2 panels)); Chakras Aligned- exploring spirituality and energy and holistic alignment of process, pain, and joy ( Oil on Canvas (4 panels) 24×48”).; and lastly Tribe Healer: Peace Meditation- the raw reflection of the collective and community based healing that have been integral in the growth and healing process for me and those I serve (30 x 30”  Acrylic on Canvas).

I chose these artworks at this time because I believe they speak to the collective healing that our world is seeking as we battle through a global pandemic, a rise in blatant racist attacks, and the trauma of grief and loss that we are not able to process quickly enough. I hope they offer hope, balance, joy and purpose as we reflect during this time of awakening.

2020 Incoming Student Exhibit

Welcome everyone, and enjoy the show!

Life Pieces to Masterpieces Summer Exhibition

We were very excited that our summer exhibit would be works from Life Pieces to Masterpieces, and we started planning early in the spring, of course expecting the paintings to line the walls of the Art Therapy Gallery in Alexandria, VA. Needless to say, an in-person exhibit could not happen. Instead, we are presenting this powerful work virtually.

Life Pieces To Masterpieces (LPTM/Life Pieces) is a mentoring and youth development organization that uses artistic expression to develop character and leadership, unlock innate potential, and prepare African American boys and young men to transform their lives and communities. Our vision is that LPTM gentlemen will be catalysts for positive change in their communities and the world. LPTM currently serves 70 boys from age three to young adulthood living in some of D.C.’s poorest and most volatile neighborhoods in Ward 7 and Ward 8, through after-school, Saturday, and summer programming. In an area of the nation’s capital where the rate of public high school graduation for “at-risk” youth is only 58%, 100% of the boys who participate in Life Pieces through their senior year graduate from high school. Nearly all enroll in college or other post-secondary career training.

Students at Drew Elementary, the school that is home to LPTM, are, according to the DC Public Schools website, 99% Black and 100% economically disadvantaged, i.e. eligible for free or reduced-price meals under the National School Lunch and Child Nutrition Program. Access to positive male role models is limited by the fact that 71% of the families in the service area are headed by single mothers.

Since 1996, rather than focusing on the deficits in the environment our youth come from, LPTM has asked questions about the environment we can create together. What happens when a boy grows up surrounded by love, security, and expression? What happens when he has a safe, loving place to go to every day after school? What happens when he builds his academic and social skills while surrounded by people who care about him? Where he learns that it’s okay to express his emotions? Where he learns how to be a leader? What happens when he discovers his brilliance and creativity each day?

LPTM has helped our young men with scholastic achievement, college readiness, conflict-resolution, positive community involvement, and most importantly, confidence in who they are as young black men. A 2016-17 evaluation by Stillmeadow Benchmark Associates, Inc. found greater than 90% of the Apprentices improved reading and math grades. Over 90% of parents observed their sons to be more confident and better decision-makers.  As the boys age through the programs they participate in workshops preparing them to become mentors who can then assist the younger members. They not only benefit from the opportunities of the program, but turn right around to help other boys learn, grow, and see positive male role models in their lives.

For more than two decades, the overarching objective of all of LPTM’s programming has been to foster the creative, academic, social-emotional, physical and citizenship development of the young men and boys engaged in LPTM. The result is documented evidence of improvements in mental health, academic performance, self-awareness, positive male relationships, and civic & social ability – which in turn help our boys and young men to believe in their ability to positively impact their own lives, their community and ultimately the world they live in.


Contacts

www.lifepieces.org

Seneca Wells (Artistic Director)
swells@lifepieces.org

Donnell Kie ( Art by LPTM Coordinator)
dkie@lifepieces.org