Section: Module 7: Lesson 2: Working with Visual Art | Humanism in Health and Healthcare | NextGenU.org
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Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to:Learning Objectives:
- Practice deliberate meditation and introspection while observing visual art articulate resulting insights that relate to the experience of illness and healthcare practice.
- Describe what visual art may represent about the individual that chose it.
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Required Learning Resources and Activities
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Health care workers learn to probe the intimate depths of an individual often through a dispassionate, scientific lens and language: measuring and interpreting blood serum chemistries, taking a history of illicit drug use, episodes of heart disease within the family. These questions are important for understanding the biomedical aspects of disease, but humanistic healthcare requires understanding the social, psychological, affective, and existential aspects of illness as well. Art can help us expand the boundaries of our exploration beyond the body further, to the individual beyond the pathology. The artist Hrair Sarkissian describes their piece ’Last Scene’ (2016) as “a series of 47 photographs of places in The Netherlands that were chosen by terminally ill patients to go and see as their last wish. The project centers on the power of a well-loved place to compress an outlook on life into a telling scene that is at once melancholic and joyful. The simplicity of each landscape or scene heightens attention to an inner journey of remembering the past and envisioning a future that no longer includes you. In contemporary culture the notion of death and dying is often consciously ignored. This project gives the viewer a way in to grapple with the question of where we come from, and where we are going. The images turn into mirrors: on the one hand you try to imagine the person who looked at the scene for the last time, while at the same time it encourages introspection: “what would my wish be?” These scenes were photographed at the date and time of the actual last visit.”
Please view at least 5 of these photographs. Spend time staring at them, and even when you think you've taken in everything one has to offer you, look a while longer and see if additional thoughts or insights emerge. Reflect on these images.
In 200-300 words answer the following questions about each photograph:
- What sort of image (physical, emotional, spiritual, mental, etc) of each patient associated with each photograph comes to your mind?
- How might those insights help you provide more humanistic care to those patients?
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Recommended Additional Readings
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Read the content under the heading "Visual Arts". (11 minutes)
National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) - 2010