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Lisa Anita Wegner

I make stuff and sometimes write about it

Tag Archives: art therapy

I had been attempting to be more authentic in how difficult my days can be with two invisible invisibilities like complex-Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Ehlers- Danlos Sydrome. It’s in my nature to focus on the positive and underplay how hard things get.

I get behind that philosophy, however I have been in a flare up state for several months now. If I’m honest I haven’t spent much time out of a flare up for several years. I’m tough and I’m strong and I’ve been working on self-care for fifteen years. But when the pain/nausea/brain fog/core spasm/exhaustion cocktail kick in, all my years of self-care expertise go out the window. I barely know who I am. I have no bandwidth to handle any experiences. My focus is entirely on trying to breathe and get from moment to moment. The world is too bright and loud and I am in more pain and discomfort and past the point of exhaustion many times more than I thought my body, spirit and soul could take.  

The other day I was chatting with a friend who asked how I was. I said “things were hard and I’m in a flare up and that in this moment I feel better.” That was true, and me still trying to be positive. For a few moments I could breathe and think while I was answering her message. Directly afterward my chest started to cramp up and I doubled over onto the floor. My diaphragm cramped up and I felt like my whole breathing system was cramped down. I felt like I was drowning. I was sure I was going to faint. At least I was already on the floor.  My friend well meaningly wrote back “I’m glad you’re feeling better!” I wondered how I could have given such a wrong impression. I don’t want to keep repeating “I feel like I’m drowning. The nausea takes up all my bandwidth. I can’t lift myself up. I can’t take the pain but each day it’s escalating. I can’t take the overwhelm. It’s scary each time my cognition drops out and I am floating in a wordless place of fear and pain and overwhelm”. I want to write another script for myself. 

I have a huge art project in the works, and I have only a faint sense of it happening. I don’t know how any human being can stand this place. I can get incredible amount of work done in say in one hour on a phone meeting. And then loose the rest of the day to just getting through intense symptoms. 

I’m sure some version of this feels familiar to many with chronic illness. 

These are versions of sensations I’ve had my whole life. I told my doctors and gym teachers all these feelings as a child and it was always put back to me that it there was nothing wrong with me. And if there was, it was my fault. I was lazy, I was told I didn’t want to participate and that I was weak. My digestion was poor; therefore, I must be eating poorly. No one asked me. They told me how it was. So as a child I stopped feeling the pain and just internalized this feeling of extreme overwhelm as failure. I was weak. I was lazy. It’s my fault. I must not want to participate. Adults asked me “What kind of kid is tired all the time?” I didn’t know but it made me feel like there was something wrong with me.  I could fall asleep anywhere as long as my torso was resting on something. And I was in this alone; I had to figure everything out.  I had to show the world that I wasn’t lazy. So I buckled up and internalized this incredible difficult experience of living with a connective tissue disorder.  It took seven years of intense therapy for me to be able to locate the body feelings I was suppressing in order to get by. Once I opened myself up to feel the sensations, my life got more difficult but the road toward healing could begin.  

So the best thing I can think to do is to record a day in all its agonizing glory, in order to honour and sit in the feeling. To be truthful about my experience and to let other folks in similar positions know they are not alone.  And honestly, this is what my days have mostly looked like for maybe two years. If I say I’m better I am faking it to some extent. All the time. 

So I’ll start recording my today. I’m two weeks away from opening a show called Intangible Adorations: Experience The Icon. I think it’s the best thing I’ve created to date. It’s part of a festival called Rendezvous With Madness, a peak artistic experience for me. I often hide in my art practise. It brings me joy and is what I’ve been using to hold on my whole life. I have can have a brutal day and then have some good news about the project. I can enthusiastically talk about the project news for a short while and pretend the rest of the day away. 

Dear Diary: I wake up in the morning and my first wave of nausea and emotional overwhelm engulfs me at the in-point of consciousness.  I realize I’m awake and often my throat tightens with overwhelm and I feel tears tickling my eyes. My first thought is “I’m not sure I have the strength to do this again”.  I move a little bit to get the sense of where my body is at. I breathe in deeply and my torso cramps and spasms and tightens around my diaphragm. I do my best not to panic when I can’t take in proper breath. I imagine releasing my shoulders and try to picture butter melting. Sometimes this helps me, this morning it starts the feeling that there is a burning tight knot from my left ear that burns through my body stabbing like hot metal though my lungs and it grabs onto my lower hip. This tightness cramps into a searing pain and if I think about it too much, it gets tighter. The more I try to relax, the tighter it gets. It cramped up my already immobile digestive system into another level of cramps. Breathe… no no no, don’t cramp up more.  I lie still hoping to get my breathing better before trying to sit up. I find a moment between cramps to sit up. I feel faint, I tear up with overwhelm. I use a roller to help me sit up. I feel faint again. My fingers and toes tingle and go numb. I breathe in again and slowly roll to my left toward the edge of the sleeping mat. My torso muscles scream in cramp-y pain, and I feel like I don’t have it in me to move or get upright. The pain and tightening is increasing, I must get up before I go into full spasm. I breathe in again reminding myself of the steps.  Roll over. Sit up. Stand up. Roll over. Sit up. Stand up. When I am this overwhelmed I lose sight of what I am doing mid action. I am out of gas, my body having exhausted itself already. I roll. I wait. What am I doing? Lying on my bed feels overwhelming as it feels more and more uncomfortable.

My thought cramps tight and it feels like there is a thread from the top of my head yanking a cramp into my chest. My heart races, I feel like I’m breathing though clay. I have to move.

I test my knees and stand up wobbly like I’m an extremely old person leaning on the wall. I catch my breath. My psoas tightens and spasms tucking my tailbone under which feels like hot metal. I try to stand up straight and support myself on the wall. I feel faint. I can’t breathe. What am I doing? Standing up. Another wave of nausea hits me and my sense of smell intensifies. I can smell the garbage in the kitchen and it makes me wretch and my mouth fills with saliva as it feels like I’m going to vomit. I can’t breath in as I’ll get more smell and more nausea. I rush to the back door and stick my head outside. I try to breathe in fresh air and the physical exertion of getting my body to the back door has my vision going spotty. I feel like I’m going to faint. My knees buckle so I hold on to the doorframe. What am I doing? I don’t know. 

I can’t get a deep breath. I am exhausted beyond belief. I can’t catch a breath. I feel like I’m drowning.  Slowly trying to move my body, which feels like cramp-y painful tightens that somehow keeps increasing past what I think I can take pain wise.  Now my upper back begins to spasm, and burn. I try three breaths, try to not cry from the overwhelm. My body doesn’t feel strong enough to get itself up from the floor. I feel like I have just run a marathon and written an exam. I am depleted mind body muscle and soul. I feel like I can’t do even one thing.  I’ve been conscious for maybe ten minutes this morning. 

When I think of tasks that need doing I get waves of panic that electrocute me to a place brighter than pain. My heart races, my hands and feet tingle sometimes I have coughing spasms. I was in trauma therapy for seven years at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto and learned how to lessen panic waves. These current ones are based in that I don’t know if I can complete any task, no matter how small. I am like a toddler with a bad flu and I’ve been asked to drive a truck while explaining a complicated subject. There is no way I can execute what is asked of me. Through determination and craftiness I manage to still get some things done. With a lot a help and a super human amount of effort execution help and planning.  

I put three towels in the laundry and I am fighting for breath. Bending over has me feeling faint. The tasks of soap, fabric softener and closing the lid have my fingers popping out of their sockets, and then I have to lie down on the floor to rest before climbing the ten stairs. The floor is freezing and hurts my back, I have no choice but to rest, maybe five minutes until I know what I’m doing and I have the strength to stand again. I crawl up the stairs and start making coffee. With sky-high nausea, coffee cuts my nausea most days. Making the coffee is challenging. I start by assembling beans, grinder and cup. I have to squat on the floor as the effort has started tears flowing down my face. I don’t know if I can do this. What am I doing? Making coffee. I stand up and pour my coffee beans. The grinder feels far too loud and is over stimulating my worn out senses.  I grind and then feel faint and lie down on the kitchen floor. Maybe I don’t need coffee I’ll just go back to bed. A wave of nausea comes over me. I can’t stand up. My mouth fills with saliva and it feels like I’m going to throw up. I walk a circle in the kitchen reminding myself who I am. Why I’m here and that coffee will make me feel better. I try again. I get the water into my cup. My wrist gives way and I drop the cup. Bending over to wipe up the water has me faint. I feel my system trying so hard to shut down. I don’t know what I’m doing. I smell the coffee beans. I fill another cup. I hold the cup with both hands so my fingers don’t give way. I get it into the kettle. I lie on the floor while it’s boiling. 

Left side of my hip flexor seizes up painfully and I’m on the floor seized over to one side. I can’t stand up all the way and the pain is so intense I feel I can’t breathe at all. I feel faint. My fingers and toes are tingling. I crawl to the fridge to get milk and a Banana Bag hydration pack. I get my milk into my coffee while doubled over and squat to try to relieve the pain. I sip my coffee but it doesn’t bring me the taste joy I’m hoping for. I taste nothing and gag. I feel like all that effort was wasted. It doesn’t even matter if I make coffee. Maybe I shouldn’t have even tried.

Then a temperature control flare starts. My hands and feet turn to ice and my core muscles start shaking. My teeth rattle together. I get so cold I am shivering and shaking. I feel like I’m faking it the way it shakes me like a rag doll. Then the chill turns into a heat flare. I am still shaking and then I start to sweat. I can sweat through several layers of clothes and then the cold sweat brings me to a freezing place when bedding and clothes are wet and cold. Sometimes I’ll have two or three temperature control flares in a row. These are one of the most exhausting experiences. And it’s gross. I’m soaking wet with drops pouring off my face and I smell like I’m in deep distress. I don’t know what’s going on but I know I can’t take it for much longer. 

I get a small wave of what feels like appetite. I have a paralyzed digestive system with EDS. I walk into the kitchen thinking I can make toast. I pop a piece in the toaster and lean on the counter for support. I feel faint; I forget what I’m doing. Toast pops up. The smell of the cooked bread brings on a wave of nausea and I double over. I can’t even butter the bread. I’m wrenching from the smell of the bread and butter and wretch into the sink. I know I can’t eat the bread and recycle it. I’m sad how much food I can’t eat. I’m malnourished with a protruding hard extended belly. 

There is an ongoing panic if I have any responsibility. I don’t know if I can do it. If I can get anywhere, or commit to anything but lying in my bed. Often I don’t know who I am or what I’m supposed to be doing. My hips, knees, ankles give way. I walk into things and walls, I feel like I’m just about to go down. If I’m carrying something I drop it. I barely feel like I can stand up for a few minutes. The idea of going to the streetcar stop has me in tears. Travel is so difficult when a system is shutting down. It takes it all out of me. When I am out, I am probably faking it to some extent. There are pain waves I pretend aren’t there. I don’t know what’s going on. I don’t know why I’m here. I’ll make eye contact and smile. I am beyond exhausted.  I am a smartphone with 4% battery left and I’m forcing it to run large apps. It won’t go. It’s can’t go. It’s too much.  I collapse to the kitchen floor.

A friend checks on me and picks me up some groceries. He walks my dog. I lie in by bed with my eyes half closed trying to release the insane tightness and muscle cramping in my body. I think I want to go outside. Just to the coffee shop at the end of my street. I’ll get dressed and go out. Even just ten minutes. I stand up to get dressed and feel faint. I start to put on pants and the act of lifting my legs takes everything I have. I realize the towels are still in the wash. Moving them to the dryer has me lying on the floor again. I put my pyjamas on and crawl back up the stairs. I’m not going anywhere. Instead I open my back door and try to get some sun on my face. 

To add some context, I used to run a film production company and ran complex creative projects. I am an extremely organized reliable person. It was not uncommon for me to work 16-hour days. So this experience is far from who I am and what I’m used to. Now I can do one small thing every two days. I’m extremely self-sufficient. It is humiliating to let people know what my days are like that I don’t know for sure if I can do something. If I try to do too much then I loose additional days. And the more I push the less cognition I have and the scarier my life gets. It’s a constant free fall and I don’t know what you’re going to get every day.  It’s hard when people refer to me as having “Time Off”. 

There is deep burning pain in my whole body that is eased by compression items. Today I’m too exhausting to put these on, and if I have a sweat out in compression items they get soaked and then they are harder to remove.  I think I’m disassociating when the pain gets too intense, and I lose time and feel like I wake up sometimes and suddenly have enough bandwidth to be aware of my environment. Sometimes I’m on the floor or I suddenly I’m on a streetcar. I don’t know what I’m doing. Sometimes it’s the automatic pilot of my life. I’m scared almost every day and I am so tired. I wouldn’t trust myself alone if there was any other way. And it’s weird to be so open about how impossible my days are.

I have been told I am currently too healthy for assistance. In the past I had an occupational therapist, a mental health nurse, a house helper and a caseworker all coming to the house. With four helpers I was ok. Now I’m told I am too mentally healthy for this help (and some has been cut by out government). And I have been told I’m not disabled enough to get in-home help. I live alone and sometimes have days lost in a pain haze, mostly lying on my floor.  I was able to get grip bars installed in my bathroom, which makes me less scared to wash when I have the strength.  I do have a lot of friends and family who chip in and help out a lot.

The anxiety around running a performance workshop and a large-scale performance when my pain is so severe makes me feel like I can’t hold on.  It’s scary and hard and I realize I have to tell the truth. So yeah my career is going well and I know I can look young and fresh and I have a lot of enthusiasm for my art. I need to be truthful that as well as that, I am barely holding on. And it’s been like this for a long time. If I say I’m feeling better, I’m telling you a version of the truth. And it might only be better for five minutes or an hour. 

So I am writing this out as a blog post because I needed another way to process this. I have been on a waiting list for the GoodHope EDS clinic since last January, and we’re hoping I get in January 2020. 

My show opens in two weeks, and I have to get to rehearsal this afternoon. I am so blessed for my incredible creative team headed by Scott White. Many of those on my team are volunteers, and they help me keep my creative vision online. Since I am in this much pain and cognitive distress, I guess that it is a miracle that the show will go on. Art saves my life every day. And everyday I hope for some relief. 

If you want to see what kind of a show someone with two invisible disabilities puts on, check this out. Get your tickets if you are in Toronto October 12-19 2019 https://workmanarts.com/rwm-events/intangible-adorations/

www.broadwayworld.com/toronto/article/Celebrities-In-Disguise-Tackle-Mental-Health-In-INTANGIBLE-ADORATIONS-EXPERIENCE-THE-ICON-20191001

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In Toronto Canada, an arrogant performance artist declares themself amazing while refusing to show any facial expression.

 

When we reached out to the haus of dada for comment we received the following message in German via telegraph from curator Fritz Snitz. “The Ubermarionette only does private performances for close friends, artists and cherished audience members and is not interested in speaking with you peoples.” -Ritzy Fritzy

Artist Would Rather Give Ownership of Her Work to Those Who Inspire, Than Those Who Can Pay.

Performance Artist’s Perceived Gender Affects Audience Reaction 

 

 

 

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In 2003, when I was just starting to make films, Angela Chao was in the camera department of my first two projects. After reconnecting last year, I fell in love with Angela’s fanciful painting and drawing on social media. Angela had found art-making as therapy and I was moved by her story as well her art. Her work was bright, bold and authentic and she created endlessly and freely. And Angela herself is so sweet and authentic – I particularly love how she snaps a picture to remember all her buyers.

“Mindless Doodles” is the second therapy installation that I’ve brought to my curation at 1313. I find that this type of work resounds with me as my own art career was born in the trauma therapy art room, and my daily art practice is what keeps me functioning. Angela and I have an understanding of art as something we need on a daily basis, to nourish our souls and stay connected to our true selves. And though the stories of our traumas are so different, the way we use our art is very similar. We understand each other’s specific trauma-based needs and refer to each other as Brain Buddies; and we’re both keen to spread awareness and help others discover art as a viable option as therapy.

When the April Windoxbox  became open unexpectedly, I was thrilled that Angela was able to bring a selection of her ceramics and her “20 minute” feeling paintings to fill the window gallery at Queen Street’s Gallery 1313.

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As well as bringing her work to Gallery 1313, Angela and I have started a series of collaborations including working with my performing persona, Thin(k) Blank Human. This summer is our inaugural exhibit together for The City of Toronto, for The Pan Am/Para Pan Am Games.  Our collaborations will be under the moniker Art Saves Lives.

I invite you to come to Angela’s opening this Thursday at 1313a Queen Street West at Brock Ave. 8pm – 10pm is open to the public. If you want to come at 7pm and have a drink, you have to private message me. Angela’s work will be shown until April 28th 2015.

About the “Mindless Doodles” Exhibit:

The installation “Mindless Doodles Art Therapy” in Gallery 1313’s Window Box space for the month of April dives into the life of Canadian filmmaker, Angela Chao, who uses the term Mindless Doodles to denote the images she sees that are not pre-conceived or arranged. These doodles come straight from the emotions and sensations of her current “crazy brain,”  the result of three on-set concussions she has suffered over the past one and a half years.

After trying many types of therapy, she found HandsForHealth.ca and cranio-therapist Edwin Galeano, with whom – after just one session – Angela found herself able to think freely and begin to escape the personality and mental changes, PTSD, depression and anxiety that had plagued her since her accidents. Even more exhilarating, she could sit still and accomplish things, an ability to that had been taken from her. She started doodling and discovered her hidden artist, and a place where she can leave behind mental challenges and be free to create.

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In her new career as an artist, she has already won an award at the Art Square gallery where her work premiered, as well as Flight Centre’s first prize of a trip to New Zealand and Australia in a competition with 1800 artists. She recently competed in Art Battle 2015, and has donated her artwork to an upcoming AIDs charity event on May 6 at TIFF.  In addition, her unique story has generated coverage by the Mississauga News, Brain Injury Association and Hospital News,
Looking forward, Angela Chao has joined created forces with Lisa Anita Wegner in creating an organization called ArtSavesLives.ca. Their goal is to help others battling a traumatic brain injury or post-concussion syndrome discover their own unique therapy.

Angela Chao’s work can be seen at Mindlessdoodle.ca For private viewing or commission art, please contact Angela at info@mindlessdoodle.ca.

Angela + Thin(k) Blank Human

Angela + Thin(k) Blank Human

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the first week after my full time trauma therapy ended, i did a pretty good job of mostly rest and self care. doing just the basics to get ready for my upcoming exhibits and performances.

last night i slept from 5:30 pm to 10:30am (whoa) and then today my brain could barely chug itself around making a cup of coffee.  i was confused all day and stressed because there were a few small details i had to figure out. i needed to call in a friend to help and now i am ready for the rest of the week, and i can mostly rest. my cognition can still drop out and then i feel like i can’t wrap my brain around much besides cuddling my dogs and making stuff.

i feel a little better now that i made this picture. and wrote this. making stuff is really the only way through for me.

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on a two week holiday break from full time trauma therapy, i had a profound experience today when i was meditating in the tub. i talked in an earlier posting about meeting ziggy stardust in my meditations (read the post here) and being compelled to do a live transformation at the black cat gallery in toronto in july 2014 called STARDUST: Life on Jupiter (see official site here).

since christmas i had come through a time of feeling super exhausted and my cognition has been dropping out mixed with bouts of very hard sleeping and inspired art making. even when i could barely move, i was compelled to draw with pencils. and then shoot and edit video in my lap:

so today i decided to meditate and consider what if this comfort, confidence and compunction inside my creativity would have come out as a child? and i got a clear vision of myself in public school getting my ziggy on and while this picture is not me, it totally could pass (like the fake puppy pictures of my rescue dogs).

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i did dress up and start young creative ventures: but i stuck to playing girls. orphans, pioneers and magic nannies were my childhood specialties. and now i feel free to play anything, human or otherwise, on or off the space time continuum. and i’m having way more fun.

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if i would have found my ziggy then, my current experience would be remarkably different. and just by imagining it, i feel everything opening up. i think i will add being a childhood ziggy stardust: rockstar alien to my fictitious history, and I’d cut a mullet without hesitation. that is when i finally give birth to my artist self in “The Fictitious History of The Haus of Dada” here is a taste of that multi year project. i’m just at the beginning of it.

happy 2015 everyone!

lisa anita wegner

 

 

 

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Shannon Cochrane (FADO) sent me an audition notice for Will Kwan’s film, “If All You Have is a Hammer, Everything Looks Like a Nail”. On top of my daily video and performance practise which is part of my trauma therapy, I had been reaching out to collaborate and work on others’ projects as well. I looked up Will’s work and was really drawn so I contacted him and set up an audition and was thrilled that I got offered the role.
So far in the art world, the artist fees have been minimal and I’ve donated them back to each exhibition/production. I make art full-time to tame the effects of c-ptsd and now enjoy regular exhibits, installations and talks about my Art Therapy Practise. I live on The Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP) and I get volunteers, donations and sponsors per project. Six years ago I feel extremely ill and have been in Trauma Therapy at Women’s College Hospital now for 4.5 years. I found art making as a resource in SPEAKArt with Art Therapist Eva-Marie Stern. My art keeps me functioning and it’s now come full circle back to my previous career of being an actress and film producer.
Will’s project is an ACTRA production and I wasn’t sure if I was ready to re-activate my Union membership for multiple reasons. I am starting intense full-time trauma therapy in October for eight weeks and even the union dues were too much for my budget. But by this point I had read Will script and couldn’t see myself not taking the role. I used all my trauma therapy tools to figure out that while I still need a lot of help on some fronts, performing is something that comes easily and learning the lines felt fun, not stressful. I decided to do the job and contact ACTRA President Ferne Downy for help manoeuvring this gig through the ODSP system as it is part of my body of work, I couldn’t turn it down. But I am not healthy enough to head back into the working world.
And despite doing excellently well for months, this project being ACTRA and involving money stressed me out as it could affect my health insurance payments. I was installing a multi projection set up for an event at the end someone asked my name. I didn’t know my name. I couldn’t remember my phone number. I hadn’t dropped out memory like that in years. I realize often the S in PTSD stands for stress. When something is important to me it throws my cognition and memory off in extreme ways. This time I knew to look at my business card for my name. I immediately went home and rested and made some art. I have six years of experience of what to do when basic skills drop out.
So with Ferne onboard I accept the gig and start working on my 17 pages of script. I play opposite to Michael Man, who has a page or two and otherwise I speak the entire time. My character is driving while delivering this dialogue. A three camera set up with four long takes in a 30 minutes triptych film.
I worked on my script daily. I would either read it out loud our think through the details of the script and the flow of the conversation. I looked at real-estate websites to see the vibe of the successful agents and I slept well and took care of myself. The morning of the shoot I woke at 6am to walk my dogs and I was pretty fresh. And I felt good about my prep work.
The shoot was an excellent environment, a small crew and Will was sensitive to my needs as well as everyone else’s. I felt like a different part of my brain kicked in, a confident performer brain that despite heat and driving did a reasonable job with the huge amount of dialogue. I felt great. This was my largest role to date in a film. And it is interesting that while certain stress stops me in my tracks, with daily work and therapy art, I can be a high functioning artist. And with my family and a group of friends helping me every day, I can do amazing things.
I’m really looking forward to seeing the film installation.
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Screen Shot 2014-09-08 at 5.32.41 PM

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During the makeup test for my upcoming performance/ live art making/ projection show STARDUST: Life on Jupiter? makeup artist Wanda MacRae and I created a universe we both wanted to play in.  We talked about the elements that we had in place and with that created a very simple performance based around the haircut, makeup and styling which transforms me into David Bowie’s character Ziggy Stardust in 3.5 hours, covered by entertainment reporter Katie Uhlmann, three go pro cameras and two art video interns that are “Stardust Technicians”.
Soundtrack by Wanda MacRae based on our mutual love of Bowie, Gaga, Boy George and a few other inspirations. My projected Stardust Video Studies will loop on the back wall of the gallery for the entire event.
I enter the gallery at 7pm with my wet hair in a towel, wearing a white lab coat. While my hair is pre dyed under the towel and my eyebrows are pre waxed and drawn on, I look essentially like myself. Wanda, the makeup artist is the “STARDUST Surgeon” as she is responsible for my transformation of my head. Wanda and I met performing with Erotic Nightmare a Rocky Horror Picture Show cast (I was Brad she was Janet) so we inserting a Rocky Horror feel. Our all female surgical crew will be dressed fashionably yet medically and have Wanda’s implements on silver trays. Both STARDUST Technicians are art video interns, they will have matching Canon Cameras and their second job is to record the event as creatively as they see fit. They will have the Stardust Lightning bolt on their faces.
I will sit in a hairdressers chair in the window of the Black Cat Gallery and absorb the feeling of the transformation while Wanda works. Once my hair is cut and styled I will put on one blue contact lens and partially dress under the lab coat, for the makeup portion.
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To build toward the ending, the white face powder will be brought out on a mirror by one STARDUST Technician while the second technician brings be a carton of whole milk. During the time Bowie was Stardust he imbibed only cocaine and whole milk. My white powder is face powder but that doesn’t mean we can’t cut it with a credit card. And I will be handed the whole milk, a treat for me once I’m STARDUST complete. I’m hoping Maha Richi, a stylist I’ve known since high school who is dressing me will be able to be there to put jacket/  the final touches on me for the cameras.
The STARDUST Technicians will countdown and pop glitter canons to signify the transformation is complete. I will mingle for the rest of the evening enjoying my milk after my Stardust Surgery.
Off all the wonderful work I have had the privilege of doing in recent years, this is what I’m most excited for. To see how it feels and how the world treats me when I have an orange mullet and no eyebrows.
The rest of the week I’ll be pulling my art practise from The Haus of Dada into The Black Cat gallery 2-6pm. Also by appointment in the evenings. I invite to come watch, play, interact, co- create or just look through the window while I play, shoot, edit, score and project as I work.

Wanda and I doing makeup test.

Wanda and I doing makeup test.

Closing party I’ll be Ten Foot Tall Queen of Stardust, with glorious rainbow gown by Vanessa Lee Wishart and video legs by Forever Epic Films.

Sneak peek at Vanessa Lee Wishart’s glorious rainbow gown for closing party

Thanks everyone who has helped me bring this to life.
Cheers and as always thanks to David Bowie himself, the quintessential artist mentor.
xo Lisa Anita Wegner

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I had my first projection happening on New Years Day. It was -19 degrees outside and I had a flu that had knocked me almost senseless. I had set up and tested the equipment the day before when I had my wits about me, so I decided to go ahead with it as planned. And I’m very glad I did.

I had my first projection happening at haus of dada on New Years Day 2014. I showed rear projections out the large front windows at the Haus of Dada, to surprise some passerby. It was -19 degrees outside and I had a flu that had knocked me almost senseless. I had setup and tested the equipment in advance so I decided to go ahead with it as planned. I’m very glad that I did. 
 
 
I cancelled my camera person because I thought I might be contagious. I was woozy on cold and flu medication and had to set my alarm for ten to 7pm to turn on the set up. When I tested it I didn’t watch all the way through there are some pieces with words and when they came up in the program I realized I didn’t flip to rear projection so it was really a show for me, lying on the couch in the main room. Sweating, coughing and buzzed on flu meds.
 
I was intending to have a few folks inside the main room to watch with me, but I was in so shape to receive anyone, so locked the outside door. I set up a camera in the locked porch. I forgot that camera batteries don’t do well in a deep freeze.
 
So I watched the program from inside, in silence (nauseous headache required silence) and I appreciated again how my video work is like my visual diary. The vids I showed were all made in the last six months and it was a walk down memory lane for me. I am happily reminded my art is really for me.
 
Watching the smaller screen with the sped up process videos of me working was interesting. When I’m actually working I go out of myself and lose time and space. Watching me making stuff is surreal: I know it’s me but I don’t have a specific memory of it.
 
There was deep freeze and black ice on the sidewalks. I left one window without a screen so I could look out. One person, possibly still drunk for new years eve, yelled that they could watch my videos forever. I was the most interested in the walk by traffic and their response to an unexpected light show. I will definitely be doing an ongoing of series of these unexpected unadvertised happenings.
 
Two days later I woke up at 6am. I still feel gross but I can’t sleep and decided to write this. I am happy.
 
 
 
It happened
I saw
Redemption
LAW
 
 
 

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today i have a list of tasks to do for my films and for my upcoming art installation. this morning i realized my brain was not in place to do this. after a long work week last week and judging an art competition on the weekend i could feel my cognition slip and no matter how many times it happens, it is still scary. i know i have to not fight it, relax, do what i can and let it come back. in a fews hours of slipping cognition my body starts shooting adrenaline from the fear and badda boom i’m slipping in and out of crippling panic. sometimes i can’t breathe and get a cold sweat. once that happens i have to go back to basics and breathe. then the extreme fatigue sets in. then i have to talk myself through a few rituals; making coffee; brushing my teeth; showering, walking my dogs; making art. i have realized it’s impossible to think myself out of the hole, but i can focus on other things that grab me. i have found documentaries on brain, communication and consciousness and art can grab me.

because i am now working with a deadline i have to make my day work and then preparing my brain to do my tasks then becomes my work. the stress of not having the cognitive abilities to do simple things, while there is a deadline… can be… well deadly.

first of all the other day i decided to bring on an experienced production manager named sarah. this on the whole was a nice big step toward productivity because once i have downloaded the project into her brain (her expression) then i have another knowledgable problem solver with me. in the past weeks i have tried to set up a volunteer to help me but it ended up being too stressful for my current situation.

so today i have a short list of tasks (financing and creative) and at the moment they are written down on a list and as i’ve been working my way out of my brain hole, some solutions have already come to mind. right now they are fuzzy but i trust they are there. this manoeuver is basically an act of faith. it helps for me to picture the event im working toward, visualize the films looking gorgeous and sounding sharp. and the event going silky smooth and inspiring people.

then i made a picture of how i feel right now. this morning’s picture is called signal interrupted for obvious reasons. and then i decided to write this blog. i feel like i am both parent and toddler. i need to be entertained and distracted and then be ready and focused when my brain is prepped.

i need to stay in the moment and not look at the time. i need to know that i can do this and the pathway i have found through art making and now blogging is the safest way through.

the good thing is that once i can rig jig my brain to be able to do my tasks, i am so focussed that i go through them quickly and deliberately simply. and once i get through the list the relief feels like christmas morning.

i’m going to make some more art to figure out where i am at now. and then i can sneak the work in. i have been at this process figuring out a systematic approach for years now and this is the first larger scale project that i have taken on since getting sick in 2008.

i feel this is the path i will take to get back into full time film production, while it can be a tiring amount of work it actually steam lines things for me. i do think i need a full time volunteer assistant until i can bring someone onboard full time.

yay the ever changing brain,

lisa anita wegner

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