Manipura: Of Flowers and Bones
SCULPTURE SERIES & ART BOOK
BY SMITA SEN
2019
ABOUT
Manipura: Of Flowers and Bones (Manipura) is an art book and sculpture series. In it, I investigate the complexities of healthcare, especially those forms of care that sit just outside the realm of professional medicine. In this series, I examine caregiving and its invisible role in the healthcare system. Caregiving is grueling and emotionally taxing work that requires assisting with meals, medical care, personal care, and transportation to an individual with an illness. The majority of caregivers in the United States are family members caring for a loved one. Requesting essays from women who have had to give and receive myriad forms of nonprofessional medical care, I began piecing together the vast emotional landscape of supporting loved ones through illness. Using advanced 3D modeling software, I created each Manipura sculpture by bridging images of medicinal herbs, bones, and soft body fossils to convey the simultaneous resilience, healing potential, and vulnerability of each contributor featured in this series. Arranged into an art book with essays from the artist and from each of the contributors, Manipura offers poignant images of caregiving and community.
EXCERPT
“Caregivers occupy a funny place in the American healthcare system. Caregivers make up a significant portion of the healthcare system, with approximately 34.2 million Americans providing unpaid care to an adult aged 50 or older in 2015 (AARP, 6). …In my first experience with demanding, all-hours caregiving for my father, I realized that healthcare is about the dedicated efforts of a community of caregivers, nurses, and doctors in supporting the well-being of a patient. Each of us contributed something different, but caregivers offer something more than countless hours of strenuous unpaid labor. Caregivers offer those things that are difficult to quantify and that often become essential to a person’s treatment and survival: love, affection, compassion, community (Walker, et al., 404; Seppala, et al., 417-418). As I better understood the role of our family’s love in my father’s treatment, more questions arose. What are the types of care that a loved one can provide? What are the types of care that, while essential, cannot be prescribed?”