The Aphrodite
Project
By Lynn K. Jones, DSW
Social Work Today
Vol. 4, No. 6, Page 26
A social worker
pairs people who have cancer with professional artists. They journey
together cocreating art and discovering new forms of self-expression.
“I was sleepwalking through life before the
not-so-gentle tap on the shoulder reminded me that life is not an
endless commodity to be wasted.” For Randi, a diagnosis of cancer
was her wake-up call, and The Aphrodite Project gave her the chance
to make the most of it.
The Aphrodite Project was a voyage into uncharted
territory that demanded courage, tapped into hidden creativity, and
unleashed the energy that develops from meaningful relationships.
Ultimately, it proved to be an experience that redefined lives in
unanticipated ways.
Aphrodite, the goddess who was a force for change
through her passionate creativity, was the inspiration behind the
unique project that Jo-Anne Blatter, MSW, LCSW, proposed to a group
of people diagnosed with cancer. Hoping to change lives, she imagined
something different from traditional individual and group psychotherapy
or art therapy. She wanted to help her clients move in new directions.
A process of creating “collaborative art”
had moved Blatter. Inspired by the work of Bolen and Estes, she had
attempted to explore some midlife issues by articulating meaningful
discoveries that were then interpreted for her by an artist. She called
this collaborative writing and art experience “The Aphrodite
Project.”
After hanging her collaborative art in her office,
she discovered that the paintings stirred her clients to share lost
stories of their lives. She decided to develop an Aphrodite Project
for her cancer clients, hoping to give them the opportunity to explore
and make meaning of their lives through the experience of creating
art with an artist.
People diagnosed with cancer enter a frightening world
of unknowns. For the participants of the Aphrodite Project, the creative
process was also an alien world. Venturing into this foreign realm,
however, provided an opportunity to learn how to overcome chaos and
discover joy in their lives. It was an inner discovery that, along
with developing valued relationships, produced a new understanding
of life and its meaning. The art they created served as a container
for their grief and isolation, for their hopes and dreams, and in
so doing it transformed them in ways they could not have imagined.
The experience was a gift of life.
The Aphrodite
Project Process
Through the Aphrodite Project, Blatter sought to support clients with
cancer. She was particularly interested in those clients who did not
participate in the traditional support groups or for whom the services
that accompany the acute phase of treatment had ended. She astutely
recognized that these were the people who most needed help. Her clients
believed that upon entering this chronic phase of treatment, their
lives were supposed to be back to normal—but they weren’t.
They were open to trying something different. The specter of losing
their lives from cancer had prompted a desire to live their lives
more fully, to be adventurous, to push the limits. They had been primed
for this moment by Blatter, who approaches her work with cancer patients
as an opportunity to learn who they are, what their needs are, where
they have left aspects of themselves behind, and where their lives
aren’t working. “When something like cancer happens, it
requires us to look at our lives,” says Blatter.
The Aphrodite Project enabled Blatter to design relationships
that each client would find meaningful. Each cancer client, “a
creator,” was paired with an artist. Each artist volunteered
to be part of the project but was selectively paired with each creator.
Marina Walker, PhD, who participated in the project as an artist but
is also a psychologist, believes that Blatter’s pairings were
critical to the project’s success.
Blatter saw her role as the “navigator”
of an adventure on which everyone—creators and artists alike—had
embarked. They would go through this together with “a sense
of the mystery,” not knowing what the outcome would be and understanding
that the journey itself was what was important. As a therapist, it
was a challenge to not have an end in mind and yet still provide the
guidance that each pair needed. Blatter visited every creator-artist
pair throughout the six months they cocreated art. She facilitated
the process and kept the momentum going, especially when people felt
stuck or blocked or when they ran into obstacles. In addition, she
met with the creators and artists in support groups.
Eight creator-artist pairs cocreated a diversity of
art: paintings, collages, masks, sculpture, photography, and a CD
of a song. In addition, the group made a quilt together. At the conclusion
of the project, the art was unveiled at a gallery opening attended
by family and friends. That event was an opportunity for all to share
how the Aphrodite Project had affected their lives, explain the meaning
of the art they created, and celebrate their life discovery together.
A Creator’s
Perspective
For Randi, it was her “implicit trust” in Blatter that
gave her the courage to participate in the Aphrodite Project. Blatter,
who openly said she did not know where this adventure might lead,
was a role model for Randi.
As a creator, the challenge for Randi was to take
her experience with breast cancer and translate her emotions into
something concrete, something one can see and touch. She had an idea
for a painting, but after she was paired with a Mexican folk artist,
the painting was abandoned. They agreed to make masks together: one
mask of Randi before the cancer and one after.
In an intimate odyssey, Randi made her masks and began
a process of feeling anew and recasting those feelings with another
person. She had never before given herself permission to talk about
what she experienced, and telling her story proved to be a powerful
journey of self-discovery.
The process of mask making entailed layering strips
saturated with plaster of paris on her face to make the form. When
the form was pulled off her face, it was “like a weight had
been lifted.” Her skin felt like new skin, “like a baby’s
skin.” She felt reborn.
The meditationlike process of layering strips of papier
mache on the form required a patience that was satisfying; Randi was
symbolically rebuilding her life. In painting the two masks, she was
able to represent the more anxious, fearful, conservative person she
had become in contrast with the freer, playful, adventurous person
she was becoming.
The masks gave meaning to her past and future along with a sense of
joy in her present life. She found resolution to her cancer experience
along with the resolve to change her life. Realizing that all we have
for sure is today and that it can be fun and joyous, Randi committed
herself to making the most out of every day.
An Artist’s
Perspective
Walker has come to believe that the act of making art has the capacity
to transmute pain and trauma. “It takes the trauma from us at
a cellular level and works the story for us so that we can see it
at a new level,” she says. She was paired with Mike and together
they painted panels that represented the life cycle of his experience
with cancer. They went to the art store together and selected colors
of paint; they sat together and talked. Mike, “a non-word person,”
was able to express what had happened to him, to tell his story through
art, where words had been inadequate in the past.
In Walker’s view, the Aphrodite Project was
a magical alchemy that brought people together and created a context
for them to experience life in a new way, producing new understandings
while having fun. Walker accompanied her creator in cocreating art,
but she did not lead him, as she would have in a therapeutic role.
She says the experience “brought out deeply human feelings for
one another.”
Walker believes the Aphrodite Project mirrors the
creative process, which explains why it has so much vitality. Drawing
on the work of Rollo May, she says, “When you face the blank
canvas or the blank page, you face yourself and the unknown; to resolve
that, you have to go inside. When one sits down to make something
that represents what they have been through, it is a profound experience
of struggle, yet at the same time hopeful. There is almost a rebirth
of self; it is an assertion of life over death, and for this reason
the creative process is innately life-orienting.”
Walker believes the potency of the Aphrodite Project
is in collaboration during the creative experience. She explains,
“The experience of going to that dark place and having somebody
there with them while they make something beautiful and then bring
it back is like a rebirth for people as human beings. It is as if
they peered into the abyss of death and came back. It is dancing around
those edges that is regenerative.”
As an artist, Walker was profoundly moved by the joy
Mike felt in the art they cocreated. She says, “I was witness
to something almost sacred that occurred. It feels like trying to
capture a butterfly—this beautiful thing that moved through
my life and everyone’s life and then it went on its way.”
For her, participation was one of life’s rare moments that has
proved inspirational in her life as well as in her own artistic process.
The Aphrodite
Project Impact
When Blatter conceived the Aphrodite Project, she had no idea how
far-reaching the effects would be. One year later, artists and creators
still feel moved and enriched by the experience. They speak passionately
about the fun they had, about the excitement of experiencing their
own creative potential and future, and about how they found renewed
vitality—a new vision of their lives.
Aaron, an environmental scientist and a college professor
who has kidney cancer, becomes animated when he speaks of his experience.
For him, the Aphrodite Project is still alive. He realizes the value
of it even more now that he has some distance on it a year later.
He describes the Aphrodite Project as “a touchstone in his life”
that has made it easier to handle everything that has come along since.
Randi learned that if you close people out because
you want to spare them or don’t want to deal with them, you
miss giving others the opportunity to help. She realized that life
is richer when you are more open to people and experience. Not only
has this changed her personal life, but also she feels it changed
how she functions at work.
Everyone shared the experience of the positive results
of risk taking. This inspired creativity in the artists, and several
of them started using new art modalities in their work. Most of the
creators have started doing new things in their lives, too. Mike started
playing the harmonica; Ann, who wrote a song and created a CD, is
taking piano lessons; and Beverly, an artist who stopped painting
when she was diagnosed with cancer, has started painting again.
Lives have been profoundly altered through the Aphrodite
Project. The paralyzing fear of having cancer, or being with someone
who has cancer, has been quieted. Hope and joy have replaced the desperation
and devastation in those with cancer. The impact is incalculable.
It builds on itself and affects almost every experience. The prospect
that it may even change the course of their illness does not seem
to be beyond possibility. At the outset, the creators and their artists
were involved in the Aphrodite Project to create a legacy before they
died, but in the end what they discovered was a new way of living.
— Lynn K. Jones, DSW, is a freelance writer
and an executive coach and organizational consultant in Santa Barbara,
CA. As a specialist in organizational culture, she supports leaders
and organizations in developing mission-driven cultures.
Resources on the Aphrodite Project
The Aphrodite Project was chronicled in a documentary film that was
featured at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival and the
New York International Independent Film and Video Festival. Information
about the film The Aphrodite Project can be found at www.tidepoolpictures.com.
For information about the Aphrodite Project, visit
www.theaphroditeproject.org.
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