Get Out of Your Head and Into Art
Workshops and classes at Duke through Duke Arts Create, the Co-Lab and elsewhere inspire staff and faculty

Last fall, Rich attended two Ofrenda workshops 鈥 one where she made (cut paper) and another where she painted a rock to look like a , both for Dia de Muertos. She snagged a spot in a screen-printing class and hoped for another in a lantern-making workshop. All are artistic expressions she has never tried before and never would have if not for the classes.

鈥淒uring the day, I鈥檓 at my desk sending tons of emails, coordinating, organizing, communicating,鈥 Rich said. 鈥淭he classes are decompress time. It鈥檚 just time to create and it rejuvenates all my other energy.鈥
Making art and expressing yourself creatively can be a way to boost mental health, according to Katherine Applegate an Assistant Professor in Psychiatry and Behavior Sciences who works with patients at the .
Applegate often works with patients who have endured chronic pain or catastrophic injuries, and usually encourages them to create art as a way to foster mindfulness. Her patients have delved into woodworking, watercolors and drawing, to name a few.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e in their head and we鈥檙e trying to get them out of their head and into the present 鈥 doing something neutral or positive by doing a physical task,鈥 Applegate said. 鈥淭hat helps them come back to the present and to interact with something. It interrupts the ruminating and catastrophizing, which are the most toxic thought patterns that create a lot of stress.鈥
Here are some other ways Duke colleagues create art to foster well-being.



Some examples of art created by Holly Rich at Duke Arts Create events includes screen printing, a Calavera and Papel Picado. Photos courtesy of Holly Rich
Art classes from the other side
Matthew Tauch, a book designer at 老牛影视 Press, can鈥檛 remember a time he wasn鈥檛 involved in art. He drew all the time as a kid and thought he might become a comic book artist or design record album covers before discovering graphic design as a career.

Not too long ago, he fell in love with a new artistic expression: screen printing.
He鈥檚 become so involved with the discipline that he鈥檚 been on the other side of Duke Arts Create workshops the past few years 鈥 once or twice a semester.
Tauch has seen everyone from students to physicians to professors in engineering come to the classes and become enthralled with the craft.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a really beautiful thing because it is so repetitive,鈥 Tauch said. 鈥淥nce you鈥檙e set up and printing, there鈥檚 a real flow that can happen. That flow state is really sort of relaxing. No matter what happened with the rest of your day or your week, if you go into the studio and you鈥檙e just printing, it allows your mind to sort of let go of all of it.
鈥淚t can become almost meditative in a way, which is really nice. You鈥檙e not even thinking about what you鈥檙e doing in the moment necessarily, but you鈥檙e also not thinking about other stresses.鈥
Plus, Tauch said, creating the art has another benefit.
鈥淭here's a physical aspect to it, there's the mental aspect to it, and there's also a social aspect to being creative because you meet other people that you know are sort of doing the same thing as you are,鈥 Tauch said.
The department that watercolors together
Mellissa Ubbens has been working since 1997 as Clinical Pharmacist at Duke and spent her life before that studying to be a pharmacist. Although she had always yearned for an artistic outlet in her life, she never had the time.
鈥淚t was all science, science, science,鈥 she said.
But about five years ago, she discovered a series of watercolor tutorials on YouTube called by artist Sarah Cray that helped make painting watercolors accessible. It broke down exactly what supplies she needed and precisely what to do with the brush. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like paint by numbers, it鈥檚 that easy,鈥 Ubbens said. The tagline on Cray鈥檚 says, 鈥淕et out of your head and into some watercolor.鈥


Mellissa Ubbens, second from left in left photo, invites her Pharmacy Department colleagues over for watercolor workshops and fellowship regularly. Photos courtesy of Mellissa Ubbens
When Ubbens was tasked with helping foster resiliency in the 老牛影视 Hospital Pharmacy Department, she thought gathering groups to share in her creative passion could encourage camaraderie.
鈥淥ur job isn鈥檛 warm and fuzzy all the time,鈥 Ubbens said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not talking about happy things the majority of the time. But when we have a painting party, we talk about everything else.鈥
What started as small groups over the course of the past year has turned into a regular, open gathering every couple months at Ubbens鈥 home, complete with potluck munchies to snack on while painting.
鈥淔rom the perspective of someone who is completely un-artsy, it was fun to tap into that and a neat little social outlet,鈥 said Mara Watson, a fellow Clinical Pharmacist. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just a nice way to get together with co-workers and not be thinking about work because our jobs are stressful.鈥
Plus, Ubbens hopes it can ignite a passion for arts in the same way it did for her. She started with watercolors and has now dabbled in pottery, metal jewelry and oil painting.
鈥淚 just love art to death, and since this was my gateway art, I'm hoping this is the gateway art for other people too,鈥 Ubbens said.
Where technology and art unite
At the Duke Innovation Co-Lab space at the Technology Engagement Center, Co-Lab Studio Manager George Breeden has seen students, staff and faculty come into the makerspace knowing precisely what they want to create and just needing the tools to make it.

But he also regularly sees people to the Co-Lab space with a vague idea for an art project or gift and lots of questions for how to get there.
鈥淥ur mission is just to enable creativity in whatever form that is,鈥 Breeden said.
With locations at the , and , the provides the tools, high-tech equipment and expertise for the Duke community to bring designs to life.
Tools available to students, faculty and staff to use for free include 3D printers, laser cutters, sewing machines, water jet cutters, routers and vinyl cutters. For certain workshops, makers are responsible for providing materials for projects.
Free Roots program workshops this semester include DIY D茅cor: , , and .
鈥淭he benefits of working with your hands and creating something for mental health, I think is a particularly important aspect that maybe we don鈥檛 talk about a ton,鈥 Breeden said, 鈥渂ut it is something that鈥檚 important, especially for some of our staff who have more abstract jobs.
鈥淗aving an opportunity to come in here and make a physical thing is a different task that helps give them a break to do something creative.鈥
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