Finding Comfort Through Art

For people living with dementia, art can open up a joyful new world.

Susan Shifrin, Ph.D. 鈥98, has seen it happen time and again. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing to see; they鈥檙e talking, they鈥檙e teasing each other, they鈥檙e laughing, and they鈥檙e smiling,鈥 she says of the participants she engages with through her nonprofit organization ARTZ Philadelphia. Participants in the organization鈥檚 programs are all people living with dementia or their care partners, and Shifrin鈥檚 organization, which works with area museums and other cultural venues to provide on-site experiences with art, is one of only a handful of its kind in the U.S.

It all started with a knock at Shifrin鈥檚 office door from a very persistent social worker. At the time, Shifrin, an art historian, was education director at Ursinus College鈥檚 Berman Museum of Art, and her visitor wanted to know if programming could be developed for residents with dementia in a local memory care community. Shifrin, whose own mother had been diagnosed with dementia, was galvanized and sought out training from Sean Caulfield, co-founder of Artists for Alzheimer鈥檚 in the Boston area. She went on to found a Mid- Atlantic affiliate in 2013.

Starting with a budget of zero, Shifrin鈥攁 team of one at that point鈥攇radually built the program and invited the first group of participants to the Woodmere Art Museum, ARTZ Philadelphia鈥檚 first museum partner and a loyal supporter of the organization through the years.

鈥淲hat I knew from my own experience,鈥 Shifrin says, 鈥渨as that with people living with dementia and their families, one unfortunate experience can deter them from trying again, and can deter them from wanting to do anything in public.鈥 Every effort was made to make people feel valued, welcomed, honored, and respected.

And while this may seem like a departure from her previous work, Shifrin sees a straight trajectory. 鈥淢y interest throughout my career in museums has been to figure out how best to help visitors feel comfortable in engaging with works of art.鈥

The arts are the vehicle for ARTZ鈥檚 programs, Shifrin says, but she sees her primary job as creating a setting in which people have room to breathe and to be adventurous in engaging with each other. 鈥淥nce people have cottoned on to the fact that they鈥檙e not going to be dismissed or devalued, they really start listening to each other and bouncing ideas off of each other,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hat we need to keep in mind, especially as people move further into dementia-related illnesses, is that their imagination and sense of humor are still there.鈥

In its first year, ARTZ Philadelphia reached about 100 people, and by 2020, right before COVID, that number had risen to around 2,000.

The pandemic took a toll on the group鈥檚 work with care communities, who were so decimated and devastated by COVID that they struggled to provide additional programs. The museum programs, however, continued seamlessly, now online, and Shifrin and her team developed ARTZ Kits for the
residential communities as well as a series of videos and new programs including ARTZ Notes, their first based around music and now one of their most popular offerings.

鈥淥ne thing that came out of COVID,鈥 Shifrin says, 鈥渋s the realization that we should have been doing some things online from the very beginning because there have always been people who are homebound that could never come to our programs, and now they can.鈥

Find out more about ARTZ Philadelphia at artzphilly.org.

Published on: 02/23/2022