
| Tobi Zausner, Ph.D.
Artist Author of "When Walls Become Doorways: Creativity and the Transforming of Illness"
Biography
Tobi Zausner has an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Art and Psychology and is also an award-winning painter and a printmaker. She is represented in private collections worldwide and has exhibited work in the Denver Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Fleischer Memorial, the Grey Art Gallery, the La Jolla Museum, the Nelson-Atkins Museum, and the Hecksher Museum. Her work is in the permanent collection of the American Museum of Natural History, the Museum of the City of New York, the New York Public Library Print Collection, the Bancroft Library, the University of California at Berkeley, the Long Island Museum, and the Williams Center for the Arts.
Tobi is listed in Who's Who of American Women, Who's Who In the East, and Who's Who In American Art and is currently writing a two-volume study on the creative process. Tobi Zausner has written and lectured widely on the psychology of art and has held teaching positions at the New School University, the C. G. Jung Center, and the Saybrook Graduate School. She is Chair of Art/ Art History in the Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology and the Life Sciences and is on the Board of A.C.T.S (Arts, Crafts, and Theatre Safety), a non-profit organization investigating health hazards in the arts and is on the Editorial Board of the Ferenczi Journal of Humanistic Studies.
About her Book
Chronic illness may feel like an impassible barrier, but it can become the doorway to a new and more creative existence. Leonardo da Vinci, Frida Kahlo, Michelangelo, and Georgia O’Keeffe are among the many artists whose physical disorders enhanced their creativity and transformed their lives. Illness shaped their work, and their masterpieces changed our world. In the face of pain and disability, they showed perseverance and ingenuity, revealing that life’s lowest moments can hold great potential for creativity and growth. The artists profiled in this book came from many different backgrounds and worked in a variety of media. But all of them experienced a transforming illness by using creativity to triumph over challenges. A transforming illness can happen to anyone at any time, from early in life to its very end. It can even happen more than once. Whether it is a single episode of poor health or a chronic condition, things are never the same afterward. When Tobi Zausner was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 1989, her doctor didn’t think she would last the year, but her life was transformed. For Zausner and the other artists discussed in these pages, the wall of illness became a door of opportunity. Using fascinating and well-documented life stories of artists and drawing upon her own experience, Zausner offers us methods for accessing our creative abilities and ways to turn a time of poor health into achievement and a more meaningful new life. Creativity is a basic human capacity extending across racial and cultural boundaries, as shown by the artists in this book. In their diversity and their determination they demonstrate that the transforming illness is fundamental to the human condition.
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The Next Step
Contact Roxanne Black-Weisheit for further information at (732) 418-1811 ext. 211 or Download The Speaker Request form and E-Mail to: rblack@friendshealthconnection.org
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