UNSW Library Online Exhibitions
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Do you know how people in your world are really going? The message for R U OK?Day 2021 is Are they really OK? Ask them today. To recognise R U OK?Day and Mental Health Month in October, Mental Health and Me presents artworks by UNSW students that showcase their unique mental health journeys. This online exhibition aims to help destigmatise mental illness in our UNSW community and, in the spirit of R U OK?Day, start conversations that could change a life. To get you started, here are some tips to help you look out for signs you or someone else need help.

 

During Mental Health Month an art prize of $1000 and a Community Choice prize of $500 will be awarded to two students featured in the exhibition. Voting for the Community Choice prize is open to all members of the UNSW community:

 
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Andreas Bartnitzky
Bachelor of Science


Melancholy

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This zine is an artistic expression of introspective thoughts in experiencing depression. Artwork allows me to share my ideas through a meaningful medium.

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Linda Bradley
Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours)


 

The Garden

 

I have experienced anxiety and depression for many years. This painting represents a garden, a wandering space of colour and beauty, nourishing my mind and spirit, lifting me up and giving me hope.

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Emily Brennan
Bachelor of Media Art


 

Sun Blest

 

Spot the we, that’s the key, for it’s the simple pleasures, that unite our community. When we share our pain, in the stormy weather, the sun can rise once more, as a refresher. In the sky it echoes, with hope and with healing, to bring us together, no matter what we are feeling!

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Hang Thanh Bui
PhD Candidate


 

Find "me" in pandemic

 

Stage 1: Lost “me” In early 2020, I arrived in Australia to start my PhD journey in UNSW Canberra. Three weeks later, I am in the first lockdown since Canberra recorded the first case of coronavirus. After 2 weeks, I felt depressed, I did not feel “me” who often goes out, makes friends, keeps smiling, and energetic. I was not used to the silence, especially, in a new place far from home and friends. The Blue invaded my inner part with an impotent anger. There is emptiness growing inside my soul then the loneliness.

Stage 2: Melody in the quiet Blue At the bottom of sadness, in this silence, I realized the importance of family, friends and being with the nature. My mother shared with me her childhood suffering from Vietnam war. Today, we are fighting with an invisible enemy, COVID-19. I tried to fulfil the emptiness and Blue with the photos and travel memories. Before heading to Canberra from Sydney airport, I spent two days in Sydney and visited UNSW Kensington campus. I always love nature and travelling. I feel impressive by the birds, historic fig trees and especially, bird of paradise plants (Strelitzia). From this inspiration, I started to paint the melody of sunrise in silence whereas I can hear the sound of hope that one day, we can travel again, we can enjoy the state of nature if we stay strong together and are patient. In this quiet Blue, I remember the beauty of flower blooming, the bird spread its wings then soared into the air. For not giving up hope and love, it will create the powerful spirit to overcome the hardship and heal the pain.

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Aiden Casey
Aerospace Engineering


 

Prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet

 

This artwork was inspired by the idea that there are many layers to individuals, and that the face we see often hides vastly more emotions and thoughts than we can understand. The title is an allusion to T.S Eliot's 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock'. His poetry has been influential in my understanding of the human psyche and it's complexity. My artwork aims to share an understanding of the difficulties and varying emotions within people that we cannot always see.

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Harry Copas
Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours)


 

Cemented thoughts (1)

 

The ambiguous phrase engraved into a section of a failed concrete cast could be interpreted in a myriad of ways – a lament to wasted hours building the mould and pouring the concrete, accepting the possibility of having to complete my degree remotely, the failure of an airport limousine driver to wear a mask whilst on the job during a global pandemic. Coming into week 10 of this never-ending lockdown, I’m focusing on keeping an open and positive mind and making the best of a bad situation.

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Oscar Davis
Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Fine Arts


 

Yo si puedo!

 

Can you do it? Can you be productive, and maintain friendships, and pay rent, and submit assignments, and go vegan, and ignore the steady collapse of the Gulf Stream and the now-pretty-obviously precedented "unprecedented" and also knock off your Aldi shop without touching too many surfaces and contracting a deadly respiratory disease? If you CAN muster the psychic energy to pull off any of these, on any given day, then I reckon take the W and go enjoy a cool beverage somewhere. You can do that.

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Shreya Dhame
PhD


 

Fix yourself

 

Graduate students are more than six times as likely to experience depression and anxiety as compared to the general population. While most understood and handled as an individual issue, a closer look at the academic environment reveals a system that increasingly focuses on measuring performance based on prejudiced metrics. Is the research community ready for a systemic change to preserve the health of its young people? Or will the onus continue to be on students to ‘fix’ themselves?

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Aimee Griffin
Bachelor of Commerce


 

The Equilibrium

 

“What mental health needs is more sunlight, more candour, and more unashamed conversation” - Glenn Close.

My artwork envisions a world where physical and mental health are of equal importance. A world where we rejoice and welcome open, honest, and vulnerable conversations without fear or shame. By utilising photography and digital illustration, I hope to capture the multiple layers of one’s health and their equal priority for both the individual and greater society.

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Lance Harris
Bachelor of Psychological Science


 

 慢走

 

The feeling of never being able to grasp a sense of accomplishment, in a perpetual state of pursuit, whilst a constant looming thought of stagnation signals failure. Such a feeling can propel one into a frenzied robotic state of existence, where persistent emotional suppression is an oasis in purgatory. Whenever you catch a glimpse of your true self, time catches you by surprise and the pain of addressing the undercurrents bubbling away only seem to grow more unconquerable, so you double down, perpetuating the cycle. Now has always been the time, to acknowledge the balance that exists at the core of all that is. To forget even for a second about external obligations, to remember to be mindful of your emotions, to not overwhelm yourself with expectation, to give your creative essence time to breathe and to experience the journey and flow of life, 慢走.

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Ian Tong Ho
Bachelor of Arts (Honours)


 

The experiences of Living in COVID-19

 

Life is hectic and sleepless while you're under lockdown and social limitations. I'm going through a period of tremendous stress and uncertainty during the onset of the epidemic. My job has been affected by coronavirus. I am finding it hard to keep a routine. It's such a difficult time to manage my emotions. If you are also feeling uneasy or worried during this time, you're not alone. Let's not forget to seek happiness throughout the lockdown and figure out how to be happy in solitude.

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Louise Humphries
Bachelor of Environmental Management


 

Forest Path

 

Forest Path (Acrylic on Canvas) is a free flowing transmutation of my relationship with depression. This relationship is challenging, forever changing and often difficult to comprehend, let alone express to others around me. This piece was created during a time of deep self reflection, where I was seeking to further understand my relationships with others, my place in the world and what is truly meaningful. It is through this that I arrived at a place that has always been home; the more-than-human life that surrounds our worlds. Forest Path is a journey into the forest as medicine. A healing journey through listening to the trees, feeling the sun, smelling fresh air and examining all the little places. It is a paying of respect to the pockets of heaven that are subtle in their healing. The colours are deep and dark and mysterious, but they are not gloom. It is an evolving hue, a metamorphic blue that can hold all of the emotions I feel. If fungi can grow from the darkest places, then perhaps I can too. Forest Path is a welcome home, it's a reminder that through feeling and processing there is healing. Allowing myself to create freely is a warm reminder to trust myself, to hold my own hand through this life path and to remember to smile at the natural beauty around me.

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Katelin Jaegers
Bachelor of Fine Arts


 

Implosion

 

Everyone gets overwhelmed from time to time, to the point where it feels like a million things are happening all at once inside your head, almost cartoonishly. Anything can set you off, no matter how big or small. It can be a mess. I know I’m always feeling guilty for how I feel, how the smallest thing can really impact me. Sometimes bottling up how you feel isn’t an option. This work is for those who feel their emotions extremely deeply, who have been told to "get over it" or to "stop being so sensitive". You’re never too sensitive, you’re perfectly sensitive.

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Olivia Surrthi Ketheesan
Business diploma


 

 I'm Fine

 

Everything is fine and therefore, so am I. Yellow is generally associated with optimism, energy and friendship. It surrounds me but it takes a backseat to white-purity and innocence which I'm using to represent my innermost thoughts and how it clouds over everything. Finally, darkness. It slowly seeps into my soul while my sturdy mask made from the same darkness tells me that no one should know about the thoughts in my head. I cannot break my mask, for everything is fine and therefore, so am I.

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Elaine Kim
Master of Curating and Cultural Leadership


 

Sa-rang

 

The inspiration to my artwork began with the internal question, "How do you deal with the emotional wounds and damage to our mental health caused by the corona effect?". My daily life was engulfed with fear due to concerns about Covid-19, and the drastic changes made to our social norm to refrain from people, outside activities, worsened my anxiety and depression. Art therapist and Painter Edith Kramer emphasized, 'Art as Therapy' and claimed that it helps protect our mental health through activities that visually express thoughts and emotions. Creating art helped me overcome my depression in the Corona era when I dealt with a lot of difficulties internally. Although I struggled with emotional, behavioral, and mental challenges, the process of creating art helped me release these emotions while reducing stress and anxiety. Rather than being overwhelmed by thoughts and emotions by the difficult situation, I took a step back and observed my mind. Whilst pondering, I came to a realization no one can solve my internal problems, and I should start this work with the desire to love myself first. This freed me from the habit of repeating thoughts of Negativity. I used the word '사랑'(Sa-rang) repetitively in my native language Korean, which means 'love'. This work was completed with the heart of generously giving myself the word I needed to heart and affirm most, 'love.' The sweetest memories and experiences of mine were expressed in warm colors. The use of constantly repeating the word "love" as the main body helped my mental healing process. In this abnormal reality, where everyone can't get out of their house and is isolated, I thought it was a way to talk about myself through art and appeal to the emotions I most needed. Repeating the word 'love' was a time of reflection for me and maximizing the concept of 'meditation.' Through this process, I naturally expressed my clogged emotions. Originally, meditation is known as a practice method to better our mental health in Asia, with the objective is to ‘relieve one from the pain of negativity and change our perspective into positive healthy thinking and life.' As the positive effects of meditation have been proven, it is being used to recover mental health, including stress management. Through this process, I overcame anxiety, overcame the scars of bad experiences of the past, and was able to have a more mature understanding of myself, through a time of reflection reminiscing difficult situations and conflicts within myself. Art with comforting and healing properties can heal wounds and boost self-esteem. In a situation where it is difficult to relieve stress due to these situational restrictions, I chose 'love' for myself. Comforting and loving myself was what I needed the most. That was the fastest way to recover from Mental Health. The way to relieve stress in this Pandemic, where the scope of actions is limited, will be very different from the pre-covid era. But remembering to choose love will make a difference to our mental and emotional well-being.

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Lamia Nureen
Master of Health Leadership and Management


 

Mental illness vs healthy mind

 

The art compares healthy and ill minds. Left: still images, dark hue and netted football imply difficulty of valuing nature, depression and entrapment when mentally ill. Honeycomb image pattern resembles football to signify mental states creating the net. Right: tilted images, bright hue and ball imply freedom, happiness and energy in healthy minds. For better distinction, left individual images are linked to respective image positions on right e.g. manned vs empty wheelchair/mask vs no mask.

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Melody Owen
Art and Design (PhD)


 

Mind Pearls

 

This hand cut collage is an illustration of my struggle with life-long depression. Though the dark tangles of thoughts that come with chemical, situational, and clinical depression can be difficult and even debilitating, there are pearls too which are sometimes formed in this agitation.

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Kelly Quach
Bachelor of Interior Architecture (Honours)


 

A mind full of questions seems to be the perfectionist’s rhetoric

 

Perfection is an abstraction, an impossibility in reality. When managed well, it can be an asset to self-motivation. But if our inner critic gets too loud, it can harm our mental health and affect our work. At first, the thought drives us to do our best, but as our greed for perfection grows, it becomes a line of worries and fear. This replay in our heads, so we go over and over the lines, thinking the more we add, the closer to perfection we hope it will be. Yet, those changes are what affect our output. Thus, use perfectionism as a driver instead of a ruler; embrace the flaws and improve to be better. Perfection is about trusting the process and not the destination.

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Kalpana Sagar
Master of Architecture


My Happy Place

 

Everyone has a ‘happy place’, it is a moment where we all wish we were when things get tough. It is an escape from reality that makes us feel safe and happy. When we question, what is the point? We often use a memory we cherish whether alone, in nature, or seeing a smile on the faces of our loved ones, these can all help us to keep moving forward. This is my ‘happy place’. A moment with my family having a delicious home cooked meal to celebrate Deepavali once a year when I fly home.

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Jessica Scandurra
Bachelor of Design


Chrysalis

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Chrysalis explores my experiences with depression, internalised homophobia, and my journey towards healing. The word Chrysalis refers to a transitional state, alluding to the process of healing in this artwork, the time in between, a state of transformation in which mental illness fades enough to allow room for growth. We find transitional periods in nature, in the transformation of a caterpillar, the flow of a lake out into the ocean, in the trees shedding leaves for the winter, and in our minds as we learn to manage our struggles and move towards happiness. I like to compare my mental health to water, at times a steady stream, fluid and always part of me, and at others, stagnant, an overwhelming force beyond my control. Depression is damp, it seeps into my bones and clings to my skin, a slow trickle filling up my space until I find myself submerged in its cold, wet solitude. It suffocates me and yet the distant knowledge that I can swim does little to move my body from its slump. Depression is an enclosed room, windows shut and curtains drawn, doors locked and the lights out, the air is stale and hasn’t known movement for weeks. It is damp, it is dark and it is lonely, it is the inability to leave my bed as the tide falls over me and it is convincing myself that it doesn’t matter, that nothing will change. Healing is floating, it is the knowledge that I have power over these waves. It is learning that the waves are part of me and through understanding them, I can learn to quell them. Healing is a warm stream of light that pierces through the window when weeks of depression give way to hope, when the walls fall away and the stale air of my room filters out to finally let the world breathe into my space. It is floating to the top of the river, no longer submerged, finally ready to swim. To me mental health is water, and healing is acceptance. It is welcoming the world into my space and finding peace in the tide, it is refusing to reject myself, accepting that I have a place in life and that I am worth the space I occupy. Chrysalis is about hope and healing, transitioning out of a constant despair and allowing for life to wash over me.

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Shannen Tan
Bachelor of Psychological Science


 

I'm real, I promise

 

Many of us spent our early years finding comfort in make believe worlds of our imagination, but when a child gets lost in the mist of their thoughts, often they are left alone. 14% of all children under 11 in Australia are affected by mental illness every year, yet society frequently remains silent or unbelieving of a child’s hardships, which can lead to years of shame and doubt. This work conveys the experiences of many, myself included, of childhood hardships being silenced, and how mental illness truly does not wait for one to grow up before ripping the seams of one’s reality.

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Hana Thomson
Bachelor of Design


 

Girl and Rabbit

 

This is a selection of small ink paintings I created featuring my characters Girl and Rabbit, as they (and I) navigate the daily challenges of fluctuating mental health. They were created as part of a mental health art challenge I hosted on Instagram last year, where I aimed to foster a safe space for people to create art and discuss mental health. Through Girl and Rabbit, I felt comfortable expressing parts of my mental health journey, particularly involving anxiety, and the little internal butterflies that often accompany me on this journey.

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Meredith Toyama
Bachelor of Fine Arts


 

I am not ignoring you I am just unpacking

 

I recorded my mood for 30 days and colour coded them into the stripes. The text is a guide I often find myself using when I try to communicate what’s on my mind. My practice revolves around the relationship between the mind and body, and the documentation of self. I explore mental health through the lens of anxiety and PTSD, and how it influences how one experiences time as space. My aim is to encourage healing and self-reflection by delving into our relationships with ourselves and others.

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Tanushree Devikoppa Yogesh
Bachelor of Medical Science


 

Peaceful sage

 

Power, attitude, behaviour and emotions -everything is controlled by our mind, then why not pamper it with some mindful meditation. In this over-achieving and uncertain world let’s be a little more kinder to ourselves and consider our mental health before anything else. On this mental health month, I wish each one of you great strength and courage through your mental health journey. More power to you, today and everyday. Everyday phenomenal.

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Aarushi Zarthoshtimanesh
Bachelor of Fine Arts/Arts


Look It's Not Nothing - After Bappu

 

My grandfather, an artist in his own right was the man who passed on his wild passion for creativity, and the shape of his big square toe to me… he passed away January of this year. Already barely floating amid a pandemic that had shipwrecked my hope for the future – I felt completely sunken. I found his shirts as emptied homes evicted of the body that loved them, but still held the loudness of his breath. So, I plucked the marigold petals that hung at his door and glued them onto the skin of the fabric. He would’ve loved to have painted them or sniffed their sweetness. For months I could not live and let go of him but did not know how to live with what was left of him. Grief and loss are a muscle memory each of us have inherited and built up- more so this past year. And I realised moving those muscles to ask for help was the strongest I could be. When I took this image – it was when I realised, I will always hold onto him and I whispered into it everything, I wish he had heard. Maybe he did. And maybe I will hear him again through the empty left pocket- beating with his granddaughter’s (he)art.

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Khyati Zaveri
Bachelor of Commerce


 

Planting Wellness

 

Planting Wellness portrays my personal mental health routine. Painting, sleeping enough, reading a book, exercising and drinking a cup of coffee every day all allow me to be a better and mentally well human being that grow and spread kindness, positivity, forgiveness, energy, passion and many more qualities that make the world a better place.

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