Posts Tagged ‘expressive arts therapy’
Sunday, April 3rd, 2022
“Love Is Stronger Than Loss” is a new playlist of 7 songs written by Daniel C. Potts, MD, FAAN honoring the love of care partners and persons living with dementia.
Daniel was introduced by Cheryl Blanchard of Alzheimer’s Tennessee to her son, Brandon Blanchard, a musician and recording professional in Nashville, TN, who provided the recording, mixing, and orchestral arrangements for the project, with Daniel Potts on piano and vocals.
We hope that these songs and the stories behind them will be inspiring to any who are walking the road of care partnership through dementia.
Here is a blog which contains the poetry, the stories behind the songs, and Youtube links for the music:
Love Is Stronger Than Loss
Here is a Youtube playlist of the songs:
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTfkuNUdVB502wUvxCtuynKRO_A0byk1h
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: advocacy, Alzheimer's, Bringing Art to Life, Care Partnerships, Caregivers, caregiving, CarePartners, expressive arts therapy, LestersLegacy, National Poetry Month, personhood, poetry,
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Saturday, October 5th, 2019
Bringing Art to Life – Chicago, a program of art therapy, STEM education, multi-cultural intergenerational relationships, virtual reality immersion, life story appreciation and person-centered care started in 2016, has added a collaborative innovation: an urban sensory garden on the campus of Wesley Place memory care facility at Chicago Methodist Senior Services.
Bringing Art to Life – Chicago was made possible, in part, through a grant from the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America.
Read about the exciting new program here:
https://www.cmsschicago.org/news-blog/urban-sensory-garden/
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, Bringing Art to Life, Chicago, Chicago Methodist Senior Services, Culture of Compassion, Dementia, expressive arts therapy, Neelum Aggarwal,
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Saturday, July 27th, 2019
Bringing Art to Life – Chicago, a service – learning program for high school students in the Chicago, IL area, engages students and persons living with Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia in art and other expressive arts therapies, reminiscence and life story-sharing. Students form multicultural, intergenerational relationships with their dementia partners, and participate in comprehensive educational sessions about dementia, including appropriate methods of interacting with persons living with dementia, etc.
Bringing Art to Life – Chicago is a collaboration between Cognitive Dynamics Foundation and Chicago Methodist Senior Services, and has received support from the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America and High Socks for Hope Foundation. Medical students from Rush University, the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois serve as facilitators of the program. Through the technology of Embodied Labs, students have virtual reality experiences living with dementia as part of their training.
During this summer’s session of Bringing Art to Life – Chicago, our high school student participants and their partners living with dementia are exploring the wonders of nature together as they plant and enjoy a sensory garden at Chicago Methodist Senior Services. The sensory garden complements the experience they are having together in art therapy, and the developing relationships help to combat stigma and build empathy.
The photos below were taken on 7-27-2019 at the sensory garden.
To learn more about Bringing Art to Life, check this link: https://www.cognitivedynamics.org/bringing-art-to-life/
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, art therapy, Bringing Art to Life, Care Partnerships, caregiving, cultureofcompassion, Daniel C. Potts, Dementia, Dementia Friendly, expressive arts therapy, intergenerational, LestersLegacy, multicultural, Neelum Aggarwal,
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Saturday, November 4th, 2017
Cognitive Dynamics Founder and President Daniel C. Potts, MD, FAAN was a recent guest of Mike Good (Together In This) for a podcast titled “The Importance of Dementia Compassionate Culture.” In the podcast, Good and Potts discuss the story and art of Lester E. Potts, Jr., an Alabama saw miller who discovered a hidden talent for watercolor painting after the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s, and how this discovery led to new insights about the persistence of personhood and creativity in persons living with dementia.
The program created in memory of Lester Potts, Bringing Art to Life, was then discussed as a means to grow empathy and create a culture of compassion in dementia care through art therapy, storytelling, and the building of intergenerational relationships. The program has two active locations, at the University of Alabama and in Chicago (Bringing Art to Life: Chicago), and is under development at other sites.
For more about Bringing Art to Life, check this link: Bringing Art to Life
#020: The Importance of a Dementia Compassionate Culture with Dr. Daniel Potts
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, art therapy, Bringing Art to Life, caregiving, Culture of Compassion, Daniel C. Potts, expressive arts therapy, Lester E. Potts, service learning,
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Monday, October 16th, 2017
Bringing Art to Life – Chicago (BATL-C), an innovative intergenerational expressive arts program for persons living with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, is being highlighted at the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America’s Concepts in Care Educational Conference in Chicago on October 19. The program is funded, in part, by a grant from the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America.
A team from BATL-C will present the program from the standpoint of the student director (Angela Ray), neurologist and co-founder of the program (Daniel C. Potts, MD, FAAN), expressive arts therapist (Allison DeSantis, MA, LCPC) facility administrator (Ann Brennan), and a Chicago-based cognitive neurologist lead faculty (Neelum T. Aggarwal, MD).
BATL-C was piloted in 2016 in collaboration with Chicago Methodist Senior Services and Northside College Preparatory School, with support from High Socks for Hope Foundation.
For more information about BATL-C, please email us at info@cognitivedynamics.org.
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, Bringing Art to Life, Culture of Compassion, Dementia, expressive arts therapy,
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Friday, July 28th, 2017
The Bringing Art to Life (BATL) Research Team presented an abstract titled “The Effects of an Intergenerational Service Learning Experience on Ageist Attitudes” highlighting outcomes data from University of Alabama Honors students enrolled in UH 300: Art to Life at the 21st IAGG World Congress of Gerontology and Geriatrics in San Francisco on July 25, 2017.
UH 300: Art to Life is an Honors service learning class offered at the University of Alabama as part of our foundation’s Bringing Art to Life (BATL) program. Students learn about Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, participate in the Virtual Dementia Tour, volunteer at an adult dementia daycare center, participate in mindfulness activities, develop an appreciation for the challenges of caregiving, and learn the tenets of person-centered care. In the experiential part of the course, students are paired with persons living with dementia, and participate in weekly art therapy sessions facilitated by an experienced art therapist. Students develop relationships with their participants, learn their life stories, and create a leather-bound life legacy book using LifeBio.com, presenting this to their participants and their families in a celebratory dinner at the end of the semester.
A research team from the Alabama Research Institute on Aging and the UA Department of Psychology led by Keisha Ivey, MA and Rebecca Allen, PhD has been conducting research since 2015, and the current abstract addresses student data from pre-and post surveys measuring empathy and attitudes toward older adults, persons living with dementia and community service.
Compared with student controls from a psychology of aging course, BATL students exhibited statistically significant improvement in attitudes towards persons living with dementia and toward community service, as well as greater increases in empathy.
Research will be ongoing, and will involve analysis of the program’s impact on participating persons living with dementia and their caregivers.
For more information on Bringing Art to Life, read this Huffington Post article by Angel C. Duncan, MA, MFT-ATR, the Executive Arts Director for Cognitive Dynamics who helped to create the program: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/angel-duncan/bringing-art-to-life-an-i_b_9619446.html
From left to right, Dr. Anne Halli-Tierney, Dr. Rebecca Allen, and Dr. Daniel C. Potts at the 21st IAGG World Congress of Gerontology and Geriatrics
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, art therapy, BATL, Bringing Art to Life, Dementia, expressive arts therapy, service learning, University of Alabama,
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Sunday, June 18th, 2017
The watercolor art of Lester E. Potts, Jr., an artist with Alzheimer’s disease, is now available for purchase at http://www.lesterslegacy.com/.
Lester, a rural Alabama saw miller, had never painted until after the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s. Lester’s newly-found creativity improved his quality of life and had many other benefits. His art has been shown from Beverly Hills to Paris, has been the subject of research, and appears in articles, textbooks, devotional books and documentaries.
Lester’s art has been used as a tool of engagement and reminiscence between care givers and persons with dementia.
Prints of Lester’s art are available in different sizes on the http://www.lesterslegacy.com/ website. In addition, 5 styles of greeting cards are available, with short verses composed by Daniel C. Potts, MD, FAAN on the back covers of each.
If you are not interested in purchasing, you may simply peruse the beautiful art that appears on the page.
Proceeds from the sale of all products appearing on http://www.lesterslegacy.com/ go toward supporting the mission and programs of Cognitive Dynamics
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, caregiving, Dementia, expressive arts therapy, Lester E. Potts,
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Sunday, June 18th, 2017
Cognitive Dynamics Founder and President, Daniel C. Potts, MD, FAAN, and Executive Arts Director, Angel C. Duncan, MA, MFT-ATR will co-present at the Re-Imagine Life With Dementia Conference in Atlanta, GA on July 27, 2017.
The conference is sponsored by the Dementia Action Alliance, and brings together the diverse dementia community for inspiring discussions, learning experiences, and engaging interactions.
Potts and Duncan will highlight Bringing Art to Life, an innovative program developed in collaboration with the University of Alabama Honors College which brings art therapy and life story preservation to persons with Alzheimer’s disease and others causes of dementia and their caregivers.
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, Bringing Art to Life, Culture of Compassion, Dementia, expressive arts therapy,
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Friday, June 10th, 2016
Cognitive Dynamics Foundation has launched Bringing Art to Life Chicago, an innovative art therapy program for persons with Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia. The program will be based on the past 5 years’ success of Bringing Art to Life in partnership with the University of Alabama Honors College in the service learning course, UH Art to Life.
The program will bring art therapy and the opportunity for empathic, intergenerational relationships to persons with dementia and students in the Chicago area, as well as education and support for their caregivers.
Our team includes Project Directors and former UA Art to Life students, Angela Ray and Cyrus Alavi, Lead Physician and Rush University Neurologist, Neelum Aggarwal, MD, and VA Lead, Kevin Hull, JD.
The program is supported in part by the High Socks for Hope Foundation, a nonprofit started by Chicago White Sox pitcher, David Robertson and his wife, Erin. The photographs below were made at the Palmer House Hotel in Chicago at a recent fundraiser hosted by High Socks for Hope.
For more information about the program, please contact BringingArtToLifeChicago@gmail.com.
BATL Chicago team Angela Ray, Neelum Aggarwal, MD, and Kevin Hull, JD
BATL Chicago Project Directors, Angela Ray and Cyrus Alavi
Chicago White Sox pitcher, David Robertson, wife, Erin, Angela Ray and Neelum Aggarwal, MD
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Angela Ray, art therapy, Bringing Art to Life, caregiving, Cognitive Dynamics, cultureofcompassion, Cyrus Alavi, Daniel C. Potts, David Robertson, expressive arts therapy, High Socks for Hope, Kevin Hull, Neelum Aggarwal, service learning,
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Sunday, April 3rd, 2016
This video by Lauren Musgrove documents a celebratory dinner held on 12/8/2015 for the University of Alabama Honors College service learning course “Art to Life,” developed by Cognitive Dynamics Foundation in collaboration with the University. The course pairs undergraduate students of diverse majors with persons who have Alzheimer’s disease or other causes of dementia in an empathy and relationship-building art therapy, reminiscence and storytelling experience. To honor their participants, students host an end-of-semester gala at which leather-bound legacy books from LifeBio.com are presented to the participants and their families. These books contain student letters, poetry, participant art and life story material. Students also give the participants the art they have created over the semester, and share stories and words of thanks to honor and validate the personhood of their new friends.
Click on the link below to watch the 6 minute video.
Art to Life: A Celebration
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Category Site News | Tags: Tags: Alzheimer's, art therapy, caregiving, Cognitive Dynamics, cultureofcompassion, Daniel C. Potts, Dementia, expressive arts therapy,
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