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December 5, 2022

Benign Taggart
Assistant Instructional Professor Breezy Taggart will present the annual Sandeen Spiel in the Humanities Monday, Dec. 12, at the College of Wy.
Taggart, an UW Honors College instructor, will discuss “Reclaiming Mental Health Representations Through Contemporary Art” in 4 p. m. in Room 506 of Coe Library. A reception is planned in the Cooper House after Taggart’s presentation.
Her discussion also will be available through Zoom at https://uwyo.zoom.us/j/94065320752 .
Surveying the visual iconography associated with mental illness throughout the particular history of art often reveals a number of recurring and prevalent stereotypes, replete with stigma, shame and misunderstanding.
Taggart notes that key examples from contemporary art such as Anna Schuleit Haber’s installation “Bloom” and the “Faces of Mental Health Recovery” public art project show that will art has the power to reclaim traumatic plus harmful pictorial narratives associated with mental sickness, transforming past portrayals or sites of pain into powerful spaces of hope and belonging.
It has been noted that Haber’s installation in a mental health hospital reclaimed this space by filling it with 28, 000 potted plants and flowers, imbuing life plus community through an evocative, living medium. “Faces” similarly relies on community, as it represents a partnership between patient and artist collaborating together to create photographic portraits of mentally ill individuals at community mental health centers.
The two examples provide a backdrop to explore contemporary artwork as the powerful medium that can transform the ways in which mental disease has been portrayed or represented visually, perhaps also playing a role within healing, understanding and wish, Taggart says.
The Sandeen Lecture in the Humanities is named for Eric Sandeen, a former professor and chair of UW’s American Studies Program, and the founding director and movie director emeritus of the Wyoming Institute for Humanities Research from UW. The lecture is co-sponsored by the humanities research institute as well as the Wyoming Humanities Council.
“Each year, the particular faculty fellows in the cohort associated with the institute’s Humanities Research Group vote to decide which fellow will deliver the lecture, ” states Scott Henkel, director of the humanities research institute. “To be chosen for it is a particular honor, showing the respect of one’s peers plus showcasing some of the best humanities study by UW faculty. ”
For more information about the lecture, email Henkel with scott. [email protected]. edu or even [email protected]. edu .