Posts Tagged ‘breast cancer art’

Introducing The Woman Inside Project

Sunday, January 24th, 2010
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Jade, a UCSF medical student, honoring one of the women inside at the opening reception at Commonweal

My aim in creating The Woman Inside Project is to shine a light on the beautiful woman that lies within each woman afflicted with breast cancer.  The idea to create this project came to me when, in my work as an OB/GYN physician, I had to tell a woman who was pregnant that her biopsy was positive for breast cancer. Inspired to help her memorialize that moment in time, before she gave birth, lost her breasts, and everything changed, I offered to cast her body in plaster.  The seed of an idea gestated, and five years later, I am giving birth to this exhibition as a way to honor the beauty within each woman, particularly those with breast cancer.

Jo

Jo

When I invite a woman to participate in this project, I invite her into my home, where I sculpt her torso using medical plaster bandages. After casting a woman’s figure, I hold up the sculpture and say, “So this is what the world sees. Now tell me about the rest of you.” I then listen for as long as it takes her to unveil the breathtaking woman inside. When she is done telling her story, I transcribe her story into a first person narrative of the beauty I see within her (and geez, are these women gorgeous!)commonweal2

Some of the women I sculpted describe the process as a spiritual healing of sorts, during which I touch their bodies, place bandages over their wounds, then remove the bandages, leaving them feeling whole.  For others, the process is traumatic, dredging up painful memories of surgical bandages and scars. Either way, the experiences are authentic, and I feel blessed to have been there, holding hands, holding space.

Lissa Rankin's The Woman Inside Project at Commonweal, Bolinas, CA

Lissa Rankin's The Woman Inside Project at Commonweal, Bolinas, CA

While traumas such as breast cancer crack us open and force us to grow, we all experience painful wounds that threaten to unravel us.  It’s how we respond to our wounds that tests us and gives us the opportunity to blossom. When you experience The Woman Inside Project, my goal is that each of you not only sees the beauty within these women, but that you see the beauty within YOU.

commonweal3While I chose as models breast cancer survivors because their wounds are so visible, I could have sculpted any group of survivors, and the stories would be equally riveting and awe-inspiring.  When people have been to hell and back- and you invite them to tell their truth- what emerges is a slender green stalk that, with tending, blooms into full flower.  The women who participated in this project have created a garden for which I can claim no credit.  It has been an honor to be their witness.

SHE LIVES

After five years in the works, tonight is the first time The Woman Inside Project will be exhibited. I am honored and blessed to be showing this body of work with kick ass photographer and Pink Goddess Nancy Bellen, who has overcome breast cancer herself.

SHE LIVES: Photos by Nancy Bellen, sculptures by Lissa Rankin

SHE LIVES: Photos by Nancy Bellen, sculptures by Lissa Rankin

Our statement about the show:

She lives through the words “You have cancer.”  She lives without knowing what tomorrow will hold. She follows a path towards recovery, and rallies the troops to help her overcome. She is not defined by her illness. She transforms. She surrenders to the Universe. She loves fearlessly. She takes off the mask.  She speaks her truth.  She rides the open road, giggling at gas stations. She plants a garden and watches it grow.  She dances with her arms held high and her head thrown back. Sometimes, she succumbs to the disease, but she lives on still, ever present. She cannot be broken because SHE LIVES.

SHE LIVES: Photos by Nancy Bellen, sculptures by Lissa Rankin

SHE LIVES: Photos by Nancy Bellen, sculptures by Lissa Rankin

About their show, Bellen and Rankin say, “This show is not about breast cancer. It’s about living. We aim to shine a light on the fact that we all experience and recover from loss over and over again in our lives.  Whether we lose a job, a loved one, a marriage, a dream, or a breast, we live still.  Not to diminish what anyone experiences, but we get to choose how we live in the face of loss.  Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional. Joy is a choice. This show is about how people live in the face of adversity. It’s about the resiliency of the human condition.”

SHE LIVES: Sculptures by Lissa Rankin, Photos by Nancy Bellen

SHE LIVES: Sculptures by Lissa Rankin, Photos by Nancy Bellen

Our show SHE LIVES opens at Commonweal today

She Lives
A Collaborative Installation with
Lissa Rankin and Nancy BellenJanuary 24 – March 6, 2010

Opening Reception:
Sunday, January 24 from 3-5 PM
Commonweal Gallery

451 Mesa Road

Bolinas, CA

Lissa Rankin at the opening reception

Lissa Rankin at the opening reception

Seeing the beauty within each one of you,
Lissa

Lissa Rankin & Nancy Bellen

Lissa Rankin & Nancy Bellen

Owning Their Stories: The Woman Inside Project

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

joyjoyHi Pinkies, and happy Healthy Thursday. This week, I thought I’d talk about breast cancer – not from the perspective of a doctor, but rather an artist. A passion project of mine, The Woman Inside Project, has been evolving for the past five years, and I have begun to reach out for sponsorship to take the show on tour. In writing the proposal, I realized that I simply must share these extraordinary stories with my Pinkies, who continue to floor me every day with the generous way you open your hearts and share your stories. Thank you for giving me this gift, and know that your beautiful bodies, souls, and stories are precious to me.

We Care About Breasts

Breasts in bikinis on the beach. Breasts in beer commercials.  Breasts in movies, on television, on billboards and buses, and in magazines.  Breast implants to make your breasts bigger.  Breasts peeking out of the Playboy behind the counter at the 7-11.  If you were an alien assessing our society for what we care about, breasts would be way up there. When you have breast cancer, you lose a piece of you that society really cares about. Which can make you wind up feeling less than whole.

The Woman Inside

As an OB/GYN physician, artist, and writer, my aim in creating The Woman Inside Project is to shine a light on the beautiful woman that lies within each breast cancer survivor.  When I began this project five years ago, I was arrogant enough to think I could hand-pick the women with the “interesting” stories, but I was quickly humbled to realize that every woman is beautiful when you take the time to see her.

For this project, I spent the past five years casting with medical plaster the torsos of women with breast cancer. When I complete the cast, I hold it up and say to the woman, “So this is what the world sees. Now tell me about the rest of you.” I then listen for as long as it takes her to unveil the breathtaking woman inside.

When the woman goes home, I paint her cast with encaustic, pigmented beeswax, the medium about which I wrote my first book Encaustic: A Guide To Creating Fine Art With Wax (Random House, 2010).  I also transcribe her story into a first-person narrative of the beauty I see within each woman.  Women I have cast describe it as a spiritual healing of sorts, during which I touch their bodies, cast their pain, then remove it and transform it into a work of art.  The stories I write are gifts to each woman, revealing to her the way I see her, letting her know she is heard and witnessed.

Every Woman Is Beautiful

Every woman’s story demonstrates a different type of beauty.  Nancy was 32 years old and 8 weeks pregnant with her second child when she was diagnosed with breast cancer.  She had to make the agonizing decision of whether to terminate her pregnancy so she could undergo treatment. She opted to abort her child because she had a “prior commitment”- her 3 year old son, Wiley, waiting for her at home. Now, 14 years and a bilateral mastectomy later, she thrives, having just returned from leading a group of breast cancer survivors on a Harley Davidson ride around Australia, spreading awareness about young women with breast cancer.  Nancy glows – a glow that shows up in the way she abstractly photographs nude women. She chooses not to make her work about breast cancer. After a decade of resisting, she finally accepts her life’s work, which is to advocate for young women with breast cancer and tell the truth about bilateral mastectomy in this at-risk group. Though  breast cancer tried to take her life, it doesn’t own her. Nancy walks next to breast cancer now, but her path is her own.

SusanBCancer caught up with Jo a little later in life. When she was diagnosed, Jo was a busy OB/GYN physician and holistic healer helping women with diseases such as breast cancer. Chemotherapy left her unable to use her hands, so she had to leave the practice she loved. Chemo is now long behind her and the wounds have scarred over, but she admits that she still feels wounded. However, I have a feeling her healing work in the world is not over.  The healer within her radiates like a lighthouse from a cliff, and I have no doubt it is her big heart that women need, not her hands.

Pam didn’t wait around for cancer.  Adopted as a child, Pam knew nothing about her family history until her adoptive mother died and the biological sister she never knew existed called with bad news.  In Pam’s biological family, everyone died of breast cancer- her mother and maternal grandmother were already gone.  Pam decided not to take any chances and opted for a prophylactic bilateral mastectomy.  Opting not to reconstruct her flat chest, Pam wears her body like a badge of courage, opting to choose love over fear. When I asked her what she looks like inside, she told me she loved hot rods, sports, and body building, but mostly she loves people.  She said, “I guess I’m like ketchup- Heinz 57, that’s me. All the ingredients all wrapped up in one is what you get.”

BreastCancerJillieBoCancer tried to knock Susan over, but she’s a Weeble- she might wobble, but she doesn’t fall down. When Susan was 40, her doctor recommended a routine mammogram.  Just before she put her breasts into the machine, the tech said, “Good luck,” and Susan knew at that moment she had breast cancer.  At every crossroads in her cancer journey, she received more bad news, but she never let it suck out her spirit. She works for the Dr. Seuss foundation, so I asked her favorite book, which she told me is McElligot’s Pool, in which a boy’s unbounded optimism allows his imagination to soar. When fishing in a small crack in the earth, in spite of the discouraging words from the pessimistic farmer,  He imagines a colorful swirl of sea creatures hidden underneath. “Oh, the sea is so full of a number of fish. If a fellow is patient, he might get his wish! And that’s why I think that I’m not such a fool, when I sit here and fish in McElligot’s pool.” Susan is like that boy. Even when facing unfavorable circumstances, when negative outcomes pile up and many would lose hope, when fear and doubt might plague those less optimistic, Susan grabs hold of her family, holds her head high, and smiles broadly, braces gleaming, imagining all of the new experiences the future holds, just underneath the crack in her life she is putting behind her.IMG_9355

I could go on (and I do), with story after story, woman after woman.  Not to diminish their pain, but breast cancer survivors are not so different from everyone else.  While traumas such as breast cancer crack us open and force us to grow, we all experience painful wounds that threaten to unravel us.  It’s how we respond to our wounds that truly tests us and gives us the opportunity to blossom. When viewers experience The Woman Inside Project, I hope they realize that each of us has the capacity to be this beautiful.  While I chose to cast breast cancer survivors because their wounds are so visible, I could have cast any group of survivors and the stories would be equally riveting and awe-inspiring.  When people have been to hell and back and you invite them to tell their truth, what emerges is a slender green stalk that, with tending, blossoms into full flower.  The women who participated in this project have created a garden for which I can claim no credit.  All I did was give them a piece of earth, a little water, and a whole lot of love, and they have bloomed.  It has been an honor to be their witness.

Find Your Slash: How To Tap Into Your Creative Spark And Still Stay Sane

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

too-many-hatsEarlier this year, for The Woman Inside Project, I was casting the torso of this awesome young woman Alexandra, who had just finished her extensive treatment for breast cancer. I’ve been working on this project for four years, casting breast cancer survivors with plaster bandages, painting the casts with encaustic, and then listening to their stories, which I then transcribe into a narrative about the beauty that is within each woman (and man, are they beautiful!) When I was interviewing Alexandra, I asked her about interests outside of her work as a biologist and environmental consultant. She said, “You are a doctor-slash-artist. I’m still trying to find my slash,” as in, biologist/writer or environmental consultant/ballerina.

What’s Your Slash?
Her comment stuck with me all this time, not just because I meet so many women who are trying to find their slash, but because we all have so many slashes, don’t we? I am a doctor/ artist/ writer/ teacher/ mother/ dog walker/ cook/ yogi/ chauffeur/ daughter/ garbage collector/ hiker/ wife/ sex goddess (okay, the last one is a wild exaggeration). I could go on. And so could you, I’m sure. But I know what Alexandra means. Many of us are still trying to find a way to express ourselves creatively. As in computer programmer/gardener or lawyer/gourmet chef or CEO/finger-painter. I have met very few artists who are desperately trying to find their Ella (left brain) slash. Not often do they say, “Gosh, I wish I was an artist/accountant.”

We all tap into our creative passion differently. For some of us, setting the table is an art form. For others, it’s playing the guitar, cooking, drawing, scrapbooking, writing, making pottery, aromatherapy mixing, candle-making, painting, wood-working, photography, jewelry-making, knitting, or flower-arranging. But we all our Ari (right brain) side- even those of us who are very Ella-dominated.

Have You Found Your Slash?

Or slashes? How do you tap into your creative genius? Don’t say you don’t have one. We all do. Some of ours are just really closeted. If it doesn’t come to you right away, invite your slash to come out of hiding. Ask your dreams to help you. Before you go to sleep tonight, invite your slash to make an appearance and help you figure it out. Keep asking every night until the answer comes to you. If that doesn’t help, choose an object from your home that represents your creativity to you. Don’t think too much about it- just let an object speak to you. Now, sit quietly with your object in your hands and close your eyes. Take a moment of silence and think about why this represents your creativity. Listen to the stories it wants to tell you. Your silent meditation may very well reveal your slash.

Why It’s Worth the Effort

Those who balance their right brain creativity wit their practical, analytical left brain mind life more fully, more healthfully, more vitally, and more successfully. Who doesn’t want that? If you’ve already found your slash but are feeling blocked, check out Annette Colby’s tips for overcoming creative block.

Own Your Slashes: Make A List
If a single creative slash doesn’t come to mind, make a list of all your slashes- every single one you can think of. Own it! These roles we play are all pieces of us, but remember that no single identity defines you. You are more than all of your slashes. A young woman I know once said, “I’m 29 years old. I’m supposed to BE something by now!” We are ALL something. None of your slashes is the essence of you. I am a doctor/artist/writer/teacher, but if I was suddenly not a doctor, I would still be me. If I couldn’t paint, I would still be Lissa. My slashes don’t define me, but they are part of me, and I own them.

Stay tuned to Owning Pink and keep an eye on the Owning Creativity category. I’ll be introducing another member of the Pink Posse soon.  Malaya Quinn, our creativity coach, teaches creativity classes to MBA students at Stanford, and she will be coaching us in exercises to help us find our slashes.  Hang onto your hats, Pinkies. It’s gonna be quite a ride!

What about you? What are all your slashes? Tell me. Tell yourself. Own it, girlfriend!

Post comments, share your stories, and help me encourage others to do the same.

With love and slashes,
Lissa

PS. If you love artist Tracey Buchanan’s many hat drawing in this post, visit her website or buy a print here.