Monday, April 27, 2015

Week Four: Medicine + Technology + Art

This week’s lessons were engaging in a way that speaks personally to my own life experiences as an individual living in a world of interconnected biological realities, technological remedies, and artistic representations of struggle and pain relief. As a person living with severe Crohn’s disease – a chronic inflammatory immune deficiency disease that causes extensive damage throughout my digestive and endocrine system and constant pain throughout my body – I can relate on a very intimate level to the exploration of virtual reality technologies as an artistic outlet for pain and a viable technological outlet to supplement biological care in situations where traditional medicinal concepts of pain relief do not help. In this blog post, I would like to unpack the artistic applications of medicine and technology in the context of my experience with Crohn’s disease, my changing body, and medicine.

This self-portrait, by an artist with Crohn's disease, symbolizes
 how images of biological health and realities impact how those with chronic disease,
like myself and this artist, shape how we perceive and project ourselves.
(http://artsblog.dallasnews.com/2013/05/los-angeles-based-artist-daniel-leighton-addresses-the-issues-of-crohns-disease-and-colitis-by-doing-a-benefit-at-waas-gallery.html/)




One of the first challenges related to my condition was the fragility of the human body, and this was a concept with which I struggled throughout my diagnosis period and initial treatment. Understanding the interconnectedness of pain, the nervous system, and biofeedback as a mechanism that proliferates complex signals of damage and repair throughout my body even as my health falters brings a certain light of beauty to even the darkest moments, and expressing this beauty in artistic terms as conceptually beautiful highlights the interaction between art, biology, and medicine discussed in our lecture. In the same way that we treat MRI scanning images as a performative – and very much interactive - reflection of our selves, so I see a complex, morbid, and simultaneously beautiful reflection of disease, biofeedback, and treatment in images of my body that show how this disease has changed my interior and exterior over the years.


This comic representation of Crohn's disease shows the psychological self-portrait
of chronic disease coupled with the perception of biological reality, distorted by treatements
and interactions with medical professionals.


Perhaps the most relatable moment of this week and of this class so far was my experience viewing Diane Gromala’s TEDx talk (link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=16&v=cRdarMz--Pw) . I have also sought virtual reality as an alternative to severe pain, and have experienced first-hand the technological bio-feedback integration mechanisms developed by her team to bring people into contact with their inner senses. These have far-reaching implications for how we perceive our inner senses, and our inner selves. For me, appreciating the beauty of being in touch with myself through my experiences in a virtual reality brought a level of inner peace that I cannot truly describe in words, and experiencing the inner beauty of my own response to pain, distraction, and sensory conflict was a life-changing experience.

References 

Choueiry, Sarah. "A Comic About Crohn's Disease by Mike - The Crohn's Journey Foundation." The Crohns Journey Foundation. N.p., 09 Jan. 2013. Web. 27 Apr. 2015.

"Crohn's & Colitis." CCFA: What Is Crohn's Disease. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.

Granberry, Micheal, and Daniel Leighton. "Los Angeles-based Artist Daniel Leighton Addresses the Issues of Crohn’s Disease and Colitis by Doing a Benefit at Waas Gallery." Center Stage. N.p., n.d. Web. 27 Apr. 2015.

Gromala, Diane. "TEDxAmericanRiviera - Diane Gromala - Curative Powers of Wet, Raw Beauty." YouTube. YouTube, n.d. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.

VRMC USA. "VRMC | About Us | Virtual Reality." VRMC | About Us | Virtual Reality. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.


5 comments:

  1. You bring up an interesting point about how technology brings us closer to our inner senses. The typical consensus on technology is that it detaches us from the natural world and uses machines to replace our senses. So to be able to find peacefulness through virtual reality offers a vastly different perspective on the role of technology in our lives.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I found your connection between Crohn's disease and expression through art to be very interesting and fitting. It's a beautiful depiction of something that is just the opposite of beautiful. I also agree that art provides an outlet that traditional medical or technological methods cannot.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you! This unit really helped me to reinterpret some of my own experiences, and reaffirmed my exploration of treatments outside of the "medical norm". These are all things that I probably would have laughed at before actually dealing with major disease, but they have really been helpful.

      Delete
  3. Hi Gregoire,

    Thanks for sharing your story! I agree that the mechanisms of the body are beautiful and really like art themselves, especially when one considers the interconnectedness of the different mechanisms.

    As a computer science major, I'm really interested in virtual reality, and it's awesome to hear how it's helped you. I think art can be a really therapeutic outlet, and the intersection of computer science, technology, and art can result in some pretty amazing things!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Of course! I'm glad that I could contribute to your exploration of your interests! I hope that you move on to contribute even further to a field that has honestly changed my life in more ways than I am physically capable of describing!

      Delete