Programs

Our personalized art programs have demonstrated high impact outcomes for cancer patients including significant improvements in clinically validated measures of wellbeing. 

We have forged relationships with leading medical institutions in Boston, Houston, Philadelphia, and New York City. Our vision is to further expand access to these transformational programs for cancer patients, their family members and care provider teams. 

Artists-in-Residence

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The Artist-in-Residence (AIR) program: An artist works one-on-one with a patient in a highly personalized interaction, adapted to meet the specific needs, interest and setting of each patient. At the end of each session a patient is able to take away a work of art, having been transported for a time away from a focus on their cancer treatment. Sessions with artists on the inpatient units, particularly with end-of-life, palliative patients, tend to have a longer duration, sometimes lasting hours, depending on the patient’s energy level and needs. Patients often communicate their life stories to the artist and express their desire for meaning and closure - themes that are often expressed through the artistic process.

Artists are able to translate these patient stories into both prose and images — if the patients are too ill to create work themselves — leaving the patient and their family members with a keepsake in the form of a handmade Japanese paper book with images and text.

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Additional Programs

Other programs have focused on the well-being of healthcare professionals. We discovered the high unmet need that exists among healthcare workers to have an outlet for creativity to provide relief from the stress of their work and to experience art and creativity. Curated museum visits (such as to the Menil Collection in Houston) and workshops have provided venues for professionals caring for cancer patients to experience art firsthand in a community, led by professional artists and curators. 

During the pandemic, the need for creative self-expression and connection for both cancer patients and frontline healthcare workers is even more acute. In 2020, we responded to these needs by adapting our successful program models to a virtual platform. After initial piloting, we are pleased to report that a virtual model is able to provide improvements in well-being, as reported by participants and family members. 

Institutional Partners

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Contact us if you would like to learn more.

info@collageartforcancer.org