Tracy Ferron, founder of Life on Earth Art, holds up Papier-mâché hearts for "Unbound." photo credit: Tessa Paoli
A drawing of Life on Earth Art's "Unbound" installation. photo credit: Photo Courtesy of Tracy Ferron
Unbound will be a 60-foot sculpture of paper mache winged hearts, ranging from nine inches to nine feet, escaping an antique birdcage. But these hearts will fly through a 100 foot hall in Napa State Hospital, one of California’s largest psychiatric facilities. The installation inside the hospital will run from November to February.
This project is very personal to Ferron.
“Having had my brother in public psychiatric institutions for most of my childhood, we took the collect calls, and I read the letters, and I felt the loneliness,” Ferron said. “To be able to really create this love in that hall is a tremendous honor and it’s an incredible deep healing for me, of coming full circle.”
Collective healing, liberation and expression is at the heart of Ferron’s mission.
“These men and women are not able to engage in the world but in this instance they will have hundreds of homemade hearts that are made for them, and they together will co-create this sculpture of wonder,” Ferron said.
For this new artwork, instead of Ferron’s house, volunteers have been coming to the Petaluma pop-up gallery for heart-making workshops. And many of them, like Ferron, have a personal connection. Some have experienced this isolation first-hand, like Petaluma resident Daisy Wiener.
“When I’ve been in a facility, you have to be able to see a colored world, you can’t just be in black and white you can’t just leave yourself in that dark place, it’s really scary,” Wiener said. “And if you don’t add color literally to a piece of paper, sometimes you don’t see if there are rainbows.”
The heart-making workshop in the back of Life on Earth Art's temporary gallery in downtown Petaluma. photo credit: Tessa Paoli
“The fact that they’re hearing that people in the community or in our society is willing to learn about their experience and be involved in the healing process with them, really touches a really internal human part of them,” Austin said. “And, you know, gives them that feeling of surprise or feeling of being seen.”
Camille Gentry is the Chief of Rehabilitation Therapy Services at the hospital.
“It really is incredible to have these community groups making papier-mâché hearts for our patients,” Gentry said. “It’s going to be so meaningful for them to receive this heart."
This is the first time the hospital has collaborated with community members on such a big piece of art. Aside from art therapy, other therapists, like ones that focus on movement and writing, will incorporate the installation into their work.
Ferron plans to bring the workshops directly to different neighborhoods and nearby counties, to include a wide range of community members. Since the group is leaving the gallery in downtown Petaluma in November, the new workshop location will be at Barn 5400 in Petaluma as well as the satellite location in Rohnert Park.
“At the heart of this project is my desire for these patients to be honored as human,” Ferron said. “To be included as part of the human family.”
To find out more about the project or volunteer visit: https://www.lifeonearthart.com/
Live Radio

