Healing Hands

 
Project as of 5/2/2020

Project as of 5/2/2020

 

We’ve all been working on keeping our hands clean, and thinking about how much disease and germs they can carry has been at the front of all of our minds. Here we all are, viewing our hands with suspicion, demonizing this part of our bodies. Don’t touch your face. Wash your hands for at least 20 seconds. Don’t touch anything. Don’t shake hands with anyone. Don’t reach out.

But I’m a henna artist. I work with hands as the nature of my work: holding them, drawing on them, and connecting—both physically and emotionally—with my clients. Hands connect us. Shaking hands is often the very first thing we do when we meet someone new. We use hands to hug one another, dry each other’s tears, give a high five, feed our children, toss a ball back and forth. We use our hands to create: playing piano, crocheting, drawing, sculpting, dancing, or acting. We use our hands to communicate: waving hello, gesturing when we’re speaking, while communicating in sign language, writing a love note, typing an email. And when we’re reaching out to someone, calling for help, or to get someone’s attention, or even to pet a cat or dog, what we use first are our hands. 

With all this talk of the Coronavirus, there’s been a lot of emphasis placed on social distancing, canceling everything, staying home, and not connecting with one another. And many of us are anxious, lonely, isolated, and struggling. As an artist I have a unique capability to help. The nature of what I do brings joy, provokes thought, instills hope, and inspires action. And even though we have to keep our distance from one another, I’m working on an art project to help us combat our isolation and uncertainty. 

I invite you to take a piece of paper, trace your hand, and inside your hand write a message of encouragement on it. Something to help someone else keep going. If you feel like it, go ahead and put your name and location on it too. And then scan it and send it to me. I’ll print every hand and message I receive, cut them out, and make a giant interlocking paper chain of all of our hands and all our encouragement. 

Our hands are not just vessels to carry germs and make ourselves and others sick, but they are vital, powerful parts of ourselves that we use to connect, create, communicate, and console. And I may not be able to physically reach out and hold yours, but if you send me a tracing of it, I can. And I can connect it to all the others I receive. Because email still doesn’t carry germs.

Here is a video that explains more about the project:

Participate and upload your own submissions: https://forms.gle/6tkrgAUZuDvp8tKQ9 People are already having a hard time with this all the closures, disruption...

Submission Directions:

  • Trace around your hand on a sheet of paper. Feel free to use any 8.5x11 sheet, or download a worksheet here.

  • Inside your hand shape, draw or write words of encouragement to share and decorate it.

  • Add your name and city, if desired. I'd love to see where all these hands are coming from!

  • Scan and send your contribution via the Google Form

  • Share your submissions and join the conversation using #healinghandsart and join the Healing Hands group online

  • Donate if you can to offset the cost of supplies and help keep me able to print all your artwork

Tips:

  • As much as I hate saying this, be sure to keep inside the lines, I’ll be cutting all of these out after I print them.

  • These will be printed on a range of skin-tone color paper, so keep that in mind with your design.

  • Please upload PDFs only.

  • I’ll be printing on 8.5x11 sheets.

  • Connect with Henna Inspired for updates on this project.

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Did you know I'm supporting this Healing Hands project entirely on my own? This means I'll be unable to print any more submissions once my printer ink runs out. Please donate if you're able to support the continuation of this project.
Your contributions will go directly to paper, ink, and my continued efforts on future projects just like this one. Any amount of support you're able to give is greatly appreciated, even if it's only $1. Thanks in advance ❤️

 

Need help scanning?

If you have a smartphone, you have a scanner! You can use a free app like CamScanner to scan a photo to a PDF. If you have an iPhone or iPad, you have scan capability built in through the Notes app. Simply open a new note, select the camera icon, and then select “Scan to Documents.” Once you have your scanned PDF, feel free to email it directly to hennainspiredinfo@gmail.com if you have further trouble uploading your submission via the form.

 

Malden Reads: Influential Books

In November 2019, Alzayer was commissioned by Malden Reads to build a participatory traveling public art piece centered on reading. Participants were invited to write on an old book page the title and author of a book that has been influential to them and add it to the giant book sculpture, which will gradually collect a collage of book titles residents find to be influential. Malden Reads: Influential Books premiered on December 7, 2019 at Malden Reads’ Holiday Pop-Up Bookstore event and will appear at future Malden Reads Events.

Catching Malden's Dreams

After the success of “Wishing Wall for Everett” Alzayer couldn’t resist offering Maldonians the same opportunity to share their own dreams.

“Catching Malden’s Dreams” invites residents to choose a colorful strip of fabric, make a wish, write their wish on the fabric, dip their fabric strip in the magical wishing well, and tie it on the giant bug catcher net along with other residents’ dreams for their city.

“Catching Malden’s Dreams“ made its debut at Arts Matter Malden day on October 25, 2019 and was designed to function as a traveling piece that could make appearances at various public city events.

Caged Ducklings

In the early morning hours of August 2, 2019, Alzayer made a public statement regarding US policy to separate children from their parents at the southern border with an adaptation to the famous “Make Way for Ducklings” statue in the Public Garden.

Here is her statement regarding the piece:

The Mallards are an iconic immigrant family in Boston. In the book, they moved here for a better life, they were looking for a place to stay. And if that were to happen during this climate today, this would be their fate. And since the statue of them is absolutely so beloved, it’s a powerful metaphor about who we get upset about caging and who we don’t.

Holding those mylar blankets was really what made it real for me. They may provide warmth, but they do so in the coldest way possible. The thing that’s comforting about being wrapped in a blanket is the weight of it, along with the warmth. And there is absolutely no weight to those things. And they’re loud. The crinkling sound they make is almost deafening when you’re wrapped up in one. You can’t think over the sound of it. And when I thought of children, ripped away from their parents, and given only this, it’s a lot to take in. It almost feels that these specific materials are used on purpose, to provide warmth yet without comfort.

The ducklings seem small and delicate, but the cages were enormous. And holding those materials in my hands really made me think even more about the wrongness of what we’re allowing to happen in our name, and with our taxpayer dollars at these so-called migrant detention centers. I prefer to call them concentration camps, because that’s what they are.

I went by early Friday morning and saw that my installation had already been removed. And I think it’s interesting that the ducks can wear Easter bonnets, Red Sox hats, and Pats jerseys, but when it comes to what their real fate might be in this country as immigrants, it’s erased pretty quickly rather than opening up a conversation about that. And I think it speaks volumes about how quickly we can free someone who is caged when we think it’s important to do so.

Press

Featured in the book Ducks on Parade! edited by Nancy Schön

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bostons-duckling-statues-put-in-cages-to-protest-migrant-detention-centers/

https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2019/08/02/make-way-for-ducklings-statue-cages

https://www.wgbh.org/news/local-news/2019/08/02/local-artist-cages-make-way-for-ducklings-statue-to-protest-child-detention-centers

https://www.jewishboston.com/make-way-for-ducklings-sculpture-briefly-embodies-political-statement/

https://www.wcvb.com/article/cages-placed-around-make-way-for-ducklings-statue-in-boston-public-garden-to-protest-detention-centers/28592902

https://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/2019/08/02/boston-common-ducklings-cages/

https://whdh.com/news/local-artist-cages-make-way-for-ducklings-statue-to-protest-migrant-detention-centers/

https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/455975-boston-artist-adds-cages-to-duck-statues-in-immigration-protest

https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/immigration/2019/08/ducks-in-detention.html

https://gregcookland.com/wonderland/2019/08/07/duckling-protest/

https://everettindependent.com/2019/08/15/i-had-to-say-it-alzayer-brings-attention-to-border-situation-using-ducklings/

http://www.bu.edu/articles/2019/nancy-schon-sculptures-still-make-headlines/

Dedham Bunny Project

In 2018, Alzayer was chosen to decorate a 5-foot fiberglass rabbit sculpture as a fundraiser project for the Mother Brook Arts & Community Center in Dedham, MA. Alzayer named the piece “Penelope” and documented Penelope’s transformation on social media. “Penelope” was auctioned at MBACC’s annual fall fundraiser, and now resides in a private collection in Dedham, MA.

Wishing Wall for Everett

What’s your wish for Everett?

That’s a question Alzayer started asking residents with her traveling participatory piece “Wishing Wall for Everett.” Participants are invited to choose a colorful strip of fabric, make a wish, write their wish on the fabric, dip their fabric strip in the magical wishing well, and tie it on the wall so it can dry, setting the wish free to come true.

Traveling since July 2018, “Wishing Wall for Everett” has been collecting residents’ hopes and dreams, and it has slowly been filling up.

“Wishing Wall for Everett” is a traveling piece that makes appearances at various public city events throughout the year. Contact Alzayer if you’d like to see this piece at your next event.