
Art, Memory, and Caregiving with Multidisciplinary Artist Kristin M. Beck | Art Loft
Clip: Season 14 | 7m 34sVideo has Closed Captions
Kristin M. Beck explores memory, caregiving and the emotional complexity of dementia in her exhibit.
Multidisciplinary artist Kristin M. Beck explores memory, caregiving, and the emotional complexity of dementia in her exhibition Before I Forget, presented at the Armory Art Center in West Palm Beach.
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Art, Memory, and Caregiving with Multidisciplinary Artist Kristin M. Beck | Art Loft
Clip: Season 14 | 7m 34sVideo has Closed Captions
Multidisciplinary artist Kristin M. Beck explores memory, caregiving, and the emotional complexity of dementia in her exhibition Before I Forget, presented at the Armory Art Center in West Palm Beach.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipThe process of making these pieces has really# helped me process, rationalize, internalize, externalize, all of the izes of what it's like# for him to have this condition, and also what it's like for me as a caregiver to experience him# now.
My name's Kristen M. Beck.
I'm an artist and a writer.
The exhibit is called "Before I Forget,"# and the jumping off point is that my father has dementia and I started to take on his care and# be his person.
And there are a lot of things that happen when you take on that role.
I began# to realize that there has to be a way for me to communicate as an artist and for me to process# what's happening with him and what's happening with me as a caregiver, what it's like to have# dementia.
How can I represent it visually?
How can I represent it with sound?
How can I represent it# with tactile things?
But also appreciate the time I had with him.
The time I have with him now is# different, but the time I had with him then and the difference between the two, the memories that# are resurfaced, if you will, because I've touched these ties or this shirt or the pockets and the# handkerchiefs and all the things that belong to someone, they belong to him, and the intrinsic# energy that's exchanged in that process is what I'm trying to communicate I think with some of# these pieces.
Emotion and love and laughter, those human things are, if I've captured it at all and# am able to share it in any way, the humanity and all these pieces and all the different ways and# all the different mediums, and it just makes it a human show.
Human exhibition.
The way I went about# the whole exhibit is it's truly like a set of mini installations.
As an artist, I like to experience# all mediums and all processes.
I find so much joy in that, pulling, you know, a paintbrush through# paint or thread a needle through fabric, I find that joyful.
And I thought, how could I, knowing# how to make all these things tell this story, help tell this story.
All of these pieces while# at first blush are decorative.
Like a quilt is a quilt, but if it's a quilt of your dad's shirts# that you quilted together, it takes on a different meaning.
I really wanna be able to share all these# stories and all these ideas with as many mediums as I have at my fingertips.
Now you're part of it,# you are part of that piece because you touched it, you went through the view-master, you took a# button, you wrote yourself a card, whatever it is, you're part of it now.
And I think it's almost# like that same investment as the memory, whether it's a big or small investment, you're invested# now in the piece.
I want to be able to pay attention to old school methods of making things,# combine it with new school methods of describing them, and where it met in the middle.
Besides, I# like to make stuff.
They're all really personal things that they've shared, and what an honor to# have received them all.
I had an opportunity at three different museums to gather memories.
Quilts# are functional pieces of art.
They mean comfort, they mean so many things.
Everybody can recognize# a quilt when they see it.
There's something very accessible about them too.
So to me, what a# great way to include that as a storytelling device is the quilt.
Some of them, there's a few# that will bring me to tears if I read them again.
Then there's this one that's visceral and you know# exactly what this person means.
It's amazing that all of those people share that, and that they# talked with me a little bit about it.
And just to be able to share those things again and again# is amazing.
Working with communities for me has enriched the pieces like tenfold because# my working practice, you know, I'm in like my individual space working on an individual# thing.
When I took it even further, went out to a community, so I'm out of my personal space making# things and invite them to help me create a piece, that just, it just broadened the whole thing.# It just creates this lovely space to be in and just the sharing and the social sharing# and the fact that I could say, "Look, thank you for helping me make this piece,# and come see it."
They now have invested meaning in the piece.
They've invested# themselves and they invested their story and I in turn invested my time and love for# their stories into something that will last.
There's a video with pieces that mimic or# replicate neon because I really wanted to include that sound, the sound of neon flickering,# and the idea of a thought flickering away that you can't quite capture or you just, now you forgot# it, and I wanted to be able to convey what that would be like.
And I wanted to bring the humor in# too with those pieces.
So one of the neon signs in the video says, "Put on pants."
Those were just# glorious little moments that I have captured along the way, some of the thoughts that people,# either my father shared or people in memory care facilities or other people that know people that# have dementia or Alzheimer's that shared these with me.
There's one called "Now What?"
Because# that's literally my dad and also literally what he would say.
He'd go, "Now what?"
And we were to# supply the answer as to what was to happen next.
But it was just really funny the way he said it.# And to me, that's a moment now, and he doesn't really do that anymore.
And so I feel like I've# captured that time.
The idea of like turn off the lights, that that's a neon sign, I just like the# idea of this tongue in cheek way of doing that, presenting some humorous thoughts, capturing# the idea of neon and the flickering thought and the flickering moment.
And then some of them also# captured those really tender truths that happened along the way, like specifically with my dad# saying, "I used to have purpose."
And that moment that he told me that, and it's in one of the# memory nests, and that I wanted to keep it safe, In-depth look at the individual# pieces, which will allow you to get I would love for more talks# around the idea of neuro arts and brain health and all of those things.
Let's think now how we can build# a better brain as we get old.
I think it is really important to have it be a# topic of conversation and to activate the space.
Sometime these gallery spaces and museums are# very quiet, and that's a wonderful experience too, but if you can also activate them with language# and sound and laughter or tears or any of those things, I think it's like lightning in a bottle.# I wanted to share the experience and, you know, at the beginning as an artist, I'm just like, "I# hope somebody gets it."
And not only did they get it, but they responded in such a human level.
They# shared stories.
And it's kind of a simple thing, but it's those simple things that can lead to# bigger things and bigger stories and bigger ideas and I think things and textures and color# and people have human responses to those things.
Art, Memory, and Caregiving with Multidisciplinary Artist Kristin M. Beck | Art Loft
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S14 | 7m 34s | Kristin M. Beck explores memory, caregiving and the emotional complexity of dementia in her exhibit. (7m 34s)
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