Merle and Alf Fitzgerald. Photo: Anton Mayer-Miller
Open till Late
Older people have always been a part of the community arts projects I was involved in
since I began working as an arts worker at the Cabramatta Migrant Hostel in Western
Sydney in 1982. Sometimes they acted on the stage. At other times they designed and
made costumes, played music, told stories, took photographs, danced or acted as
translators and historical research consultants. Some were residents at aged care centres,
others lived independently. They were an integral part of my community. In the same
waytoday when I sit down over our Sunday lunch with our children, parents, grandparents
and great grandparents, we all sit at the same table, sharing food and drink along with
different political opinions, arguments, laughter and music. Sometimes stories are repeated
and sometimes things are forgotten. That is my world. And it is the attitude I bring to
each of the projects. There has never been this sense of otherness as though older
people are somehow seperate to the rest of us. But I also live in another world where
ageism exists with all its negative stigmas. I live in a world where many elderly people
spend their Sundays alone at home or in residential care.
These diaries and journals explore different ways I have actively engaged with older adults
in creating art. Some involve active participation in public theatre outcomes where the focus
is on social connectedness, self expression and the opportunity to re-imagine their world in
different ways. Other strategies focus on a more personal one on one approach in dementia
units using a reminisce method including music, sensory processes re-enactment and play
to trigger memory. I have also used strategies to connect older people with others such as
with the older residents of the Oshima Island Leprosorium in Japan with older and younger
people from Australia. My aim in this on going research project is to further contribute
in finding way to enrich the lives of older people, particularly those with dementia and to help
breakdown the stigmatism that still exists with attitudes towards older people..
Oshima
Oshima Island has been the home for people with Hansen’s disease (Leprosy) since 1909. Mr Takashi Tosu was a photographer who developed his own tools and technique of telling the story of life on the island and his fellow patients.
Longreach
Touch, laughter and dance is the key to Shin Sakuma’s method of engaging residents at the RSL Aged Care Centre in Longreach Queensland
Nagoya
In Nagoya I visited two residential aged care units that use art strategies to re-engage older people.
Gladstone
Mackay
Washington DC