Excerpt:
Today's self-taught artists belong to an extended family
that includes the physically disabled, the abused, the
impoverished, the unconventional and those, like Candyce
Brokaw, living outwardly conventional lives that belie
their post traumatic stress disorder. Brokaw, 55, spans
the spectrum of this contemporary genre: a survivor
of incest and rape, she is a visionary artist and founder
of Survivors Art Foundation (SAF). Her recent collaborations
with Pure Vision Arts and Fountain Gallery, in New York,
champion the works of talented visual artists.
Organisations such as Hospital Audiences, Inc. (HAI)
in New York City, began an art therapy programme in
1969 and now provide community facilities for people
with mental disabilities, including schools, homeless
shelters and substance abuse centers, offering them
interactive workshops in music, performance, media and
visual arts. Many of their artists have become well
known, including Ray Hamilton and Melvin 'Milky' Way.
These artists comprise a diverse population and are
now referred to as visionary, marginal, naïve or folk
artists, to name a few current identities. Blurred as
these lines may seem, this expansive genre is essentially
composed of self-taught artists whose remarkable instinct
for what colour can do for a line involves little pre-planning.
What they put down stays down. Their art is driven by
inner necessity, something people like Candyce Brokaw
are compelled to do.
At 38, Brokaw, a chronically depressed mother of three,
broke down, retreated to her bedroom and began to obsessively
draw; a menagerie of pigs, birds and snakes scratched
in pencil, bodies spewing other bodies bled straight
from tubes. 'My art came from within,' she says, 'I
couldn't stop.'
She never expected to be a fine artist. 'My monsters
still lurk, but my art helps keep them at bay,' says
Brokaw. Art heals, but for Brokaw healing is an ongoing
process and she founded Survivors Art Foundation in
1997 'to connect others in similar, silent worlds and
give them a voice'. The umbrella organisation was open
to all artists suffering from physical or mental trauma.
Word of this international lifeline flashed through
cyberspace, with thousands of people - from Iraq to
Indiana - accessing the site. By 2000, SAF's web gallery
was part the Computerworld Smithsonian Collection on
Information Technology.
Brokaw met many self-taught artists through SAF, like
Ross Brodar and Alison Silva. Brodar, 38, began painting
as a teen in a correctional program. Uninvited to the
Annual Outsider Art Fair in SoHo, New York, he hung
his paintings inside a rented mover's van and parked
it curbside at the auspicious Puck Building fair site.
Passers-by, invited into this make-shift gallery, purchased
his art - outside the indoor outsider event.