Follow On 2020/2021
What did the project involve?
The aim of this project was to explore the therapeutic potential of creativity, demonstrating the different ways that art and the imagination can enable the bereaved to express and process their loss. The project grew out of two highly successful projects: Hay and Dawson’s Brigstow funded project, ‘An Empathetic Realisation of Embodied Grief in Fiction Film’ and Good Grief: A Festival of Love and Loss, an online festival funded by the Wellcome Trust
‘Creative Grieving’ drew on insights from psychotherapists, bereavements councillors, and art therapists as well as artists, photographers, directors and writers who had turned to creative projects as a means of expressing and processing their grief.
The Project aimed for five outputs:
- Five filmed segments on creativity and grief, shown on the Grief Channel
- A creative film, written and directed by Jimmy Hay
- A collaborative animated film about children, grief and creativity
- A book by Lesel Dawson, Creative Grieving: Art, Loss and the Imagination. This will a research-lead but also accessible book on creativity and grief, aimed at a popular press.
- A policy paper on the need for grief education in schools.
Creativity and Grief Interviews
The team organized 5 filmed segments on creativity and grief for the Grief Channel. These comprised a series of interviews on Zoom were recorded and then edited to form these segments. The overarching question for these was: ‘what is the role creativity plays in the grieving process?’ These were aired and were free to view if watched ‘live’ and are now available for further viewings ‘on demand’ by subscribers of the Grief Channel.
A Creative Film
In the practice-as-research component of the project, Jimmy Hay produced a short fiction film as a means of exploring his experience of grief and the way that creativity impacts his processing of grief, if at all. Unlike Lost Property (the research output of Hay and Dawson’s Bristow project), which was collaborative, this will be a single authored and directed film. During the creation of the film and after the shoot, Dawson recorded interviews with Hay about his experience of making the film and how it impacted his experience of grief. This will also include recorded ‘behind-the-scenes’ footage of the film shoot, which would provide additional content for the project. This work will form one of the case studies in Dawson’s book Creative Grieving.
Animated Films on Children, Grief, and Creativity
In this part of the project the team collaborated with therapists / bereavement counsellors, art therapists, children bereavement councillors and the illustrator Gary Andrews to make two short, animated films about children and grief. It began with a description of how children’s expressions and experience of grief can be different from adults (using Julia Samuel’s metaphorical description of children jumping in and out of puddles in terms of their experience of grief) and then moved to an exploration of how creativity can have an expressive and therapeutic function for children. The animation was aimed to be accessible and aimed at anyone interested in how to support bereaved children. It was released on the Grief Channel but was also offered as a something that can be used by children bereavement charities (such as Winston’s Wish and Grief Encounter, both of which are Good Grief Festival partners) and in schools as a resource for teachers.
A Book by Lesel Dawson, Creative Grieving: Art, Loss and the Imagination
This research-led but accessible book seeks to build on the research generated (and contacts made) from the Good Grief Festival. This book will draw on current psychological and therapeutic approaches to grief, it will argue that the imagination is crucial to the processing of loss because grief typically involves a wound of the imagination. Creative Grieving will begin with a substantial introduction that uses current ideas on grief, cognition and memory to suggests the ways in which creativity can be constructed as therapeutic; the introduction will also propose how artistic expression fits into the Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement (Stroebe and Schut, 1999). This will then be followed by six vivid case studies that illuminate the complex and diverse ways that creativity can help the bereaved to process loss.
A Policy Paper
This paper sought to look into the need for grief education in schools. The research team believed statutory grief education would be an effective and efficient way to help school pupils talk about death, preparing them to manage their own grief and support others, and fostering the development of a more compassionate society.
Who are the team and what do they bring?
- Jimmy Hay (Film and Television, University of Bristol) is a filmmaker and lecturer with experience of UK-wide cinematic release. He brings his expertise in the fusion of theory and practice with audio-visual interrogation of cognition and emotion in filmmaking. Jimmy leads the Medical Humanities Cluster’s ‘Grief’ research strand.
- Lesel Dawson (English, University of Bristol) is a researcher centred on the history of psychology, focusing on how representations of the experience of grief and the meanings attributed to it have changed over time. Lesel has published academic work on the history of emotions and on theatrical and cinematic representations of grief.
- Lucy Selman (Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School) is an Associate Professor in the School of Population Health Sciences. Her research interests fall into two areas: the development and evaluation of complex clinical interventions, and palliative and end of life care and bereavement. She is currently conducting an NIHR Career Development Fellowship leading the OSCAR study (Optimising Staff-patient Communication in Advanced Renal disease). She is also Co-Principal Investigator on an ESRC-funded national study on bereavement during the COVID-19 pandemic (in collaboration with Dr Emily Harrop at Cardiff University), and the founding director of Good Grief Festival. She co-leads the University of Bristol Palliative and End of Life Care Research Group.
What were the results?
The 5 filmed segments on creativity and grief for the Grief Channel can be found below:
Robert Neimeyer is the Director of the Portland Institute for Loss and Transition. He's published 30 books, including a series of volumes on Techniques of Grief Therapy and Grief and the Expressive Arts. He serves as Editor of the journal, Death Studies.
In this talk, Robert explores include how bereavement can bring about a crisis of meaning; how charity can be an important form of meaning making; and whether meaning making as a way to continue the bonds with the person who has died is always a positive activity.
Jane Harris is a psychotherapist and filmmaker. With her husband and fellow filmmaker, Jimmy Edmonds, Jane co-founded and runs The Good Grief Project. It was created following the death of their son, Josh, to share their experience of grief and to help others find a creative expression of grief through photography, film and creative writing.
They talk about the fear surrounding death, and about how Josh’s funeral allowed his peer group to think about death and mortality. Jane elaborates on the role that creativity plays in processing grief and meaning making, and how we don’t ‘get over’ someone’s death, but instead find ways of continuing our relationship with the person who has died.
Victoria Tolchard is an art therapist specialising in bereavement support. Her mum died of cancer when Victoria was 22 years old, and Victoria is currently creating a book designed to help people understand and talk about death and the process of dying.
A key way in which Victoria encourages bereaved people to share their feelings and emotions is through art. Art can allow adults and children to express and process their grief in ways that go beyond words. Art allows grievers to share their own stories either singly or in groups, with such storytelling crucial to the grief recovery process.
Simon Bray is a Manchester-based artist and creative producer. He uses photography, audio, installation and text to explore the notions of place, identity and loss. Simon’s Loved&Lost project has been seen by over three million people worldwide and is supported by the book, Loved&Lost – Volume 1.
Simon talks about the death of this own father and how that impacted him, and how returning to places reminiscent of the loved one who has died can help bring back sensory memories. Photographing groups of siblings also helped Simon to process his grief for his younger sister, who died of brain cancer in 2018. This exploration culminated in the project, Siblings.
Liz Gleeson is a highly qualified and experienced psychotherapist and educator in the field of grief and loss. She is also the curator of the podcast Shapes Of Grief, which is a recommended resource in universities and colleges internationally. She joins Lesel Dawson to discuss the detail of how our bodies are impacted by grief. Liz also reflects more widely on her personal and professional experiences of loss, using examples from cases to explore the diverse ways that people experience grief emotionally and physically.
Julia discusses the importance of externalising the relationship with the person who has died, instead of hiding it away and covering it up. Pain is the agent of change and without feeling the pain of grief it can be hard to process the loss.
She talks about the importance of using objects to remember and connect to people who have died, and the power of writing letters, visualisation techniques and other creative activities that allow you to connect imaginatively with the person who has died.
This project funded the creation of the short film, Nothing Echoes Here, by Jimmy Hay.
Nothing Echoes Here (2022), is a Brigstow-funded practice-as-research short film that charts a 24-hour period in the life of a woman and her two children, in the near-aftermath of the loss of their husband and father. The film explores the role that space – interior, exterior, familiar, non-familiar – plays for those grieving a profound loss, whilst utilising formal elements of film language and performance to portray grief in an authentic and empathetic manner, prioritising a sense of experience over story and narrative.
The film was recently reviewed by Benjamin Park on Brigstow Blogs, entitled ‘Reflections on Lost Property and Nothing Echoes Here’.