Contemporary Still-life Paintings Work by Del Grosso Hauptman Koch Wesselmann and others Healing The Bruised Soul Sweet Home Indiana: 1930's Rural Landscapes of Lawrence McConaha A Grosse Pointe_psychiatrist says creativi gives eve one a sense ofwell-being. FRANK PROVENZANO SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS THE GREAT JOURNEY IN LIFE IS DISCOVERING WHO YOU ARE September 15 - October 28 DAVID KLEIN GALLERY 163 TOWNSEND BIRMINGHAM MI 48009 Telephone 810.433.3700 Fax 810.433.3702 Will Barnett he had sliced both of her wrists to the bone. But she was still alive. She was locked behind heavy doors in the isolated wards at the Lafayette Clinic. Her arms and legs were restrained. The diag- nosis was all too obvious: deeply disturbed and suicidal. Or so it seemed. Soon after Victor Bloom took the case, he began to hear the voice of an incarcerated poet in the same mental patient who had been diagnosed as chroni- cally depressed and a threat to herself "Her poetry communicated a part of her healthy self," said Dr. food, one-step modem efficiency and the ubiquitous looming dead- line. The modern-day sickness: stress. Dr. Bloom's response: therapy — actually, the type of self-examination strikingly sim- ilar to the artistic process. "Uncovering one's own sense of creativity applies to many more people than artists," he said. By tapping into their own creativity, business executives can increase their effectiveness in the workplace, parents can raise their children better, and workers threatened with layoffs can reevaluate their employment options. For Dr. Bloom, the uncon- scious mind holds many secrets. Explorations of feelings and "blocked and depressed" screen- writer/producer, all indecisive ra- dio and TV producer, a journalist with terminal anxiety, and a For- tune 500 executive who survived corporate cutbacks. "Each person has creative po- tential," he said. "It could be writ- ing, needlepoint, pottery. And you can realize that creativity in everyday life." Most of his cases aren't as im- mediate or life-threatening as was the pivotal one 35 years ago with the suicidal patient. But the psychoanalytical process Dr. Bloom used three decades ago is still helping patients help them- selves, he said. He begins with a series of questions to encourage a per- sonal and family history. Along "The Skaters" original silkscreen poster Voted "The Best Place For Original Fine Art Prints Or Posters" Monthly Detroit - 29203 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield (810) 356-5454 CAROL WIElfiND & ASSOCIATES ARTISTIC - CREATIVE COMFORTABLE 46 A 0 L L A N D INTERIOR DESIGN By Appointment Phone (810) 661 6321 - Bloom, a Grosse Pointe Park- based psychiatrist, recalling one of his first cases as an intern in the late 1950s. "As she told more and more about her life, she gradually got better." The patient wasn't destined to become the next Sylvia Plath. But with Plath-like candor, her poetry revealed the unspeakable demons she feared. Through con- tinual free-association exercises to encourage further artistic ex- pression, Dr. Bloom helped the patient discover the causes of her deep psychological malady. Today, most of Dr. Bloom's pa- tients report a common malady affecting the masses in a high- tech, pop-culture world of fast thoughts are firmly in Dr. Victor Bloom: the way, the client is en- the realm of art and the It isn't just artists couraged to free- associ- field of psychology. Em- who need to ate and relate the ploying psychotherapy uncover their images, words and to help his patients pry creativity. sounds that come im- open repressed memo- mediately to mind. ries, Dr. Bloom is planted in both "Most people feel a compelling worlds. need to open and liberate their Some of his clients are strug- lives," he said. And it's precise- gling artists, while others are just ly that liberation process where plain struggling. Regardless, art and therapy coincide. they share one common goal: to Inherent in many artworks is cultivate their self-expression the deeply expressive soul of the abilities as a antidote to healing artist. Vicariously, many art ap- their bruised psyche. preciators can deal with their "Tapping into one's creative own fears and insecurities abilities is a way for each and through observing art, Dr. Bloom every person to get a better sense said. of well-being," he said. Yet in the continual rush to re- His clients have included a define what is and isn't "art," the