Monday, 8 May 2017

FMP - Artist Research - Lucy Fahey

FMP - Artist Research - Lucy Fahey


While doing my information research I came across an article that had illustrations by a woman named Lucy Fahey. Due to the article being by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) there isn't much information regarding the artist, I tried to find more information online but there wasn't much, so with this Artist Research I will be looking at the original ABC article regarding loneliness and sharing my thoughts and opinions on the artwork shown.
ABC graph showing suicide with gender and age.




The ABC article sheds light on the reality of elderly suicide, it's a heartbreaking article to read as it shows real people in these situations. It seems that first comes the social isolation and loneliness and then the depression hits when then leads to suicide attempts, the problem is that it's so easily prevented. These people have been almost forgotten about by society and it's our job as human beings to ensure no one feels like they have no options left. 

Lucy Fahey's illustrations on this subject are really beautiful. I found it really difficult to find pictures depicting elderly loneliness but I'm very happy I found these. There were 3 pieces of art on the article and one really sprung out to me, it's of a man sitting alone, his back turned and looking as though he's staring out of a window. This is such a common aspect of life with the elderly. I used to go to care homes when I was younger to sing to the elderly at Christmas with my primary school and you'd see many people doing this exact thing. My Grandma lives in a bungalow where there's many bungalows with many elderly people living in them and you can see them looking out the windows at the trees and the sky just watching the world go by all alone. I'm not saying all these people are lonely but there's a certain beauty within the sadness in that moment, they almost glaze over suspended in a moment and just wish I could know what they were thinking.


I really like Fahey's technique. It's almost effortless, the way the water colour is used is as though there isn't any blending, the highlights and low lights sit next to eachother working perfectly to create a depth that is very human. The colours used for human skin are are very raw, from the peaches and pinks to the blues and purples and leads to a very realistic depiction of the human form.

Overall I really enjoy the realism of Lucy Fahey's work. I think it really brings life to an article that is so heart wrenchingly sad.



ABC Article - http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-10-08/mental-health-depression-elderly-suicide/6808998
Lucy Fahey - http://www.lucyfahey.com/index/

FMP - Information Research

FMP - Information Research


Here I have collated a few different articles that interested me regarding loneliness as part of my research into how loneliness affects the elderly. I will use this information to improve my sketches and book work as now I believe I have clearer understanding of the mental state that elderly people have to live with while lonely and how that loneliness can even end in suicide.
Some articles also include ways we as a society can help elderly people when going through these problems and I will be using that information to create a poster as a way to inform people and try and gain awareness.

[1] Loneliness

Recent technology has left us doing jobs with more ease than before yet have made us busier and busier everyday and have made our elderly more lonelier and lonelier without company every day.

Gone were the days when children and grandparents sat side by side and read books or played board games together. Today, our kids are more preoccupied with playing video games and watching television than spending time with their grandparents. This is the age of secluded seniors.

According to recent studies, about one-fourth of the population of seniors live alone, while almost half report being lonely regularly. The studies have also found out that the more a senior gets lonelier, the more they are likely to decline and die faster. It is said by an US study that 60 year olds have a 45 percent risk in death when they report feeling lonely. There is also more than 50% mental and physical decline among seniors who feel lonely than those whose social lives have been active. Lonely people are also at risk of acquiring Alzheimer's disease. Lonely people oftentimes push other people away and isolate themselves from society.

And not only that, the US study reports that seniors who feel lonely were either married or have been living with a partner for some time. Experts think that it's not the more relationships you have but the quality of the relationships that you enjoy.

So why are our seniors so lonely? One reason for this is because they are alone. Some of them are placed in nursing homes, assisted living communities and other communities where they have limited contact with their family. Oftentimes, their family members pay little attention to them and do not have deep engaging communications with them. The other roots of a senior's loneliness include reduced mobility, reduced income and loss of friends and family members. Loneliness can greatly impact quality of life and health. There are negative health effects that may arise from being lonely. Loneliness is said to have negative effects on blood pressure and is associated with depression and risk for mortality. Loneliness can also predispose to vices such as smoking and alcohol consumption.

This problem among our elderly can be addressed by creating communities where seniors can befriend others at their age group, group services that offer help and support for seniors, and with the use of volunteers in the community who can give emotional, social and practical support.

Loneliness and Early Death

In a latest study by researchers from the University of Chicago, feeling extremely lonely can increase a senior's risk for premature death by 14 percent. The researchers studied the rate of physical and mental decline on seniors. They have found out that older people can eliminate their risk for death by having resilience and by growing from everyday stresses. According to these experts, loneliness can bring about negative consequences such as sleep disruption, blood pressure elevation, increase in the stress hormone  cortisol, altered gene expression in immune cells, low well-being and increased depression. The researchers say that seniors can prevent this decline by staying in touch with family and friends, taking part in family functions and sharing good times with family and friends.

[2] Elderly men have the highest suicide rate - and ageism stops us from doing something about it

The most recent Australian suicide statistics from 2013 show that, out of the whole population, men aged 85 years and over have the highest suicide rates. While the attention these figures have garnered is a positive sign, this is hardly a new phenomenon.

Over 38 men in every 100,000 of that age group die by suicide, which is more than double the rate among men under 35. The rate is around seven times higher than in women of all ages.

With very few exceptions in Australia’s history, annual suicide rates have always peaked in older males. And while these rates fluctuate from year to year, there’s no evidence of any sustained increase in the past decade.

This is the common theme worldwide. Most countries record their peak suicide rates in this group. So why has the problem of suicide in older males not been an issue of concern for the general public?

A grim picture

It’s certainly not due to a lack of knowledge about suicide in older men, or its drivers. Numerous Australian and overseas studies have identified issues such as severe depression, loneliness, social isolation and lack of social support; physical health issues, such as pain and cancer; and loss of independence as being important in various ways.

Of course, how these issues affect someone varies considerably and often depends on the person’s life journey from childhood through to late life. Childhood adversity, personality attributes, experience of traumatic life events, relationships, employment and use of alcohol and other drugs can all affect someone’s suicide risk late in life.

[3] Loneliness among the elderly in the UK is on the rise, a survey shows.

The Age UK poll of 2,000 over-65s found 10% described themselves as often or always lonely - a rise from 7% a year ago.
Four in 10 said their TV or pet was their main form of company.
Research has shown loneliness increases the risk of ill-health and early death, prompting ministers to call on people to look out for people at risk of loneliness in their communities.

'Devastating impact'

The poll randomly selected and then interviewed people aged over 65 according to their gender, working status and the presence of children, said Age UK.
Last winter, the 'Friends' campaign appealed for a return to an "old-fashioned sense of neighbourliness" by encouraging people to check on elderly friends and neighbours.

Announcing the move, Jeremy Hunt said it was a source of "national shame" that loneliness was emerging as such a problem.
Caroline Abrahams, of Age UK, said loneliness can have a "devastating impact".
She said: "Loneliness not only makes life miserable for older people. It is also really bad for their health making them more vulnerable to illness and disease."
Research has shown that the ageing population has led to an increase in people living on their own.
But Ms Abrahams said cuts to local services, such as lunch clubs and day centres, had exacerbated the problem.

The health effects
Living alone is linked to habits that are bad for health.
For example, eating poorly and having less motivation to be physically active can be a consequence of being physically isolated.
Being alone can also affect mental health, causing people to feel low and depressed.
However, feeling lonely can in itself be bad for your physical health. Studies have shown that social isolation can cause damage to the immune system leading to a condition called chronic inflammation.

[1] http://www.doctortipster.com/19859-for-the-elderly-loneliness-is-a-health-risk-factor.html
[2] http://theconversation.com/elderly-men-have-the-highest-suicide-rate-and-ageism-stops-us-from-doing-something-about-it-46923
[3] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-27247418








FMP - Image Inspiration

FMP - Image Inspiration










These images will be used as a source of inspiration for my sketches, book work and research. I chose these images because I want to know what's going through these elderly peoples minds, are they content? sad? depressed? fearful? I will research the state of mind of people in the same situation as people in my images and decipher what the best way is to depict their situation in my FMP.

FMP - The Fear of Loneliness

Thursday, 23 February 2017

Social Action Evaluation


Social Action Evaluation


When I started the Social Action Project I wasn't sure what issue I wanted to try and tackle as I was interested in exploring multiple problem areas in today's society. After researching a few areas such as nuclear warfare and bullying I decided to create my project work around racism. I'm passionate about this subject as I'm lucky enough to live in a place where I am in the majority, I don't know what it's like to be looked down upon and treated with disrespect wholly because of my race and what I look like. Sadly though, many people are being discriminated against and shunned purely for something that is out of their control, something that is only on the surface, a different pigmentation in the skin and yet we are all the same, human. Through this project my aim is to give those discriminated against a chance to be heard and those of us choosing to ignore it, a chance to open our eyes and see that we are all equal.

Overall I wanted to achieve a piece with multiple messages, different art works on the same sized space connected by one running theme, racism. The way I did this was by choosing to make a textile box, size squares of fabric with different ways of showing equality that will be joined together to make a cube. The various fabrics I chose were all in a monochrome scale with a couple of exceptions, I chose monochrome because black and white have always had a big divide, so I thought by mixing the two and using different shades of grays and black and white stripes it would portray a joining of races. I did a few pages of experiments in my art book which determined the art I would put on it, one showing two humans almost in an equals sign, another saying "Racism is Real". These statements and art pieces were really important to me in order to get my message across.
Using fabrics and needles work was a big step for me, I've never done anything like that before but I thoroughly enjoyed it, I practiced a variety of techniques in order to have the sewing the way I wanted it and I ended up finding it vert therapeutic, I still need to spend a lot more time practicing in order to improve but I would happily challenge myself to do it again perhaps for my Final Major Project.
My inspiration for this piece comes from my image research. All the images I researched were from either the South African Apartheid or the Holocaust which happened fairly recently in history terms but in technology it didn't so all the images were in black and white which influenced my decision to base my final piece on a monochrome pallet. All of my research images are very raw and saddening to look at because they're reality. It's difficult to re-create that reality into a textured art piece which is why I took the decision to make my final piece more informative. The aim of this is to try and open peoples eyes to the reality of what inspired me.  

 A problem I faced in this project was time management. I didn't get to finish my final piece which doesn't actually disappoint me too much, I wanted to spend time on this project as it's something I'm very passionate about and to rush it wouldn't have felt natural to me. If I had tried needle work in the past then maybe I would've known how much longer it would take so a goal for my next project is to plan forward more and give myself more time to finish things that are important to me as an artist.

 Megan Chilcott.










  

Tuesday, 17 January 2017

Social Action - Racism Image Research



Racism Image Research















I chose these images because they reflect real people in real situations. There is complete sadness behind each one of them. They lack equality which is painful and sad as we are all humans and no one is better than anyone else, we're all the same. 

Saturday, 14 January 2017

Social Action - Racism Research

Social Action

Racism Research


The South African Apartheid

Under the apartheid system, nonwhite South Africans, who comprised the majority of the nation’s population, were forced to live in separate areas from whites in both rural and urban areas. The districts set aside for nonwhites were generally much poorer agriculturally and located farther from transportation hubs and offices, which put their inhabitants at a disadvantage when getting to and from work and even completing basic tasks like shopping for groceries.

Nonwhites had no say in the politics of South Africa, and were required to have documents or passes in order to move from one area to another, which escalated the levels of hardship experienced by the people.


At first, apartheid was a social movement, but it was signed into law under the National Party with the adoption and passage of the Population Registration Act of 1950. This legislation created framework for apartheid by classifying South Africans according to their biological races. Then, the National Party enacted a series of land acts, which collectively set aside over eighty percent of the nation’s lands for whites. In an egregious display of authority, the government evicted thousands of nonwhite South Africans from their rural homes, driving them into cities and selling their land to whites for farming and ranching.

Hitler and The Nazis
Hitler had firm racial policies and believed that non-Germans should not have any citizenship rights. There were many groups of people who were targeted by Hitler's policies, but none more so than the Jews.

The Nazis believed that only Germans could be citizens and that non-Germans did not have any right to the rights of citizenship.

The Nazis racial philosophy taught that some races were untermensch (sub-human). Many scientists at this time believed that people with disabilities or social problems were genetic degenerates whose genes needed to be eliminated from the human bloodline.

The Nazis, therefore:
-Tried to eliminate the Jews.
-Killed 85 per cent of Germany's Gypsies.
-Sterilised black people.
-Killed mentally disabled babies.
-Killed mentally ill patients.
-Sterilised physically disabled people and people with hereditary diseases.
-Sterilised deaf people.
-Put homosexuals, prostitutes, Jehovah's Witnesses, alcoholics, pacifists, beggars, hooligans and criminals - who they regarded as anti-social - into concentration camps.

The Untouchables in Modern Day India

More than 160 million people in India are considered Untouchable, Human rights abuses against these people, known as Dalits. They also refused their children access to school. Dalits are not allowed to drink from the same wells, attend the same temples, wear shoes in the presence of an upper caste, or drink from the same cups in tea stalls.India's Untouchables are relegated to the lowest jobs, and live in constant fear of being publicly humiliated, paraded naked, beaten, and raped with impunity by upper-caste Hindus seeking to keep them in their place. Merely walking through an upper-caste neighborhood is a life-threatening offense.