Early Childhood Development

Where communication and media are central to early childhood development

EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT| Approaches| Tools| Issues| Regions/Countries| MDGs| Polls / Discussions

Average Rating: 0 out of 5 (1 ratings submitted)

Artists Action Around AIDS/Highly Effective Art (AAAA/HEART)

Country

South Africa

Region

Africa

Programme Summary

Artists Action Around AIDS/Highly Effective Art (AAAA/HEART), an initiative by the Centre for HIV and AIDS Networking (HIVAN), is an programme that aims to raise public awareness on issues related to HIV/AIDS using the cultural arts as a tool for communication and advocacy. At the same time the project also aims to contribute to the empowerment of communities affected and infected by HIV/AIDS. Towards this end AAAA and HEART develop exhibitions, catalogues, presentations, publications, forums, developmental workshops and forge links with cultural organisations that advocate for change.

Communication Strategies

HEART/AAAA goals include:

  • Giving artistic reflection, translation and presentation to the challenges and complexities surrounding HIV/AIDS through development and facilitation of experiential workshops for HIV-positive youth and adults.
  • Educating through art via public presentations, participatory and through production of resources and publications that identify cultural responses to HIV/AIDS.
  • Providing a platform for self-advocacy and expression by those infected and affected by HIV/AIDS by recording, documenting and archiving the human stories of living with HIV/AIDS.

Overall, the programme activities are designed to give voice to cultural understandings around HIV/AIDS, enhance local conceptualisations of complex biomedical issues around HIV, and provide meaningful opportunities for engaged discussion within and by communities around the pandemic. The programme is particularly concerned with encouraging local community participation, and therefore strives to locate its activities in areas that enable local accessibility.

As part of their activities AAAA develops and curates exhibitions that reflect and mirror the history and challenges particular to HIV/AIDS in South Africa, thereby serving to document the often lost and forgotten human face of HIV/AIDS.

The organisation also gives communities and artists a voice through participatory training workshops. Community artists are encouraged to depict the “physical face” of AIDS and to archive, document, explore and express the human condition. The languages of the arts are considered effective as they have the ability to cross boundaries of culture, language, literacy and religious belief. Following the workshops, collaboration may occur between visual artists, the media, performing artists and educationists to produce projects and campaigns that are able to highlight, for example, the issues and myths surrounding HIV/AIDS.

The project also conducts train the trainer workshops which seek to mobilise trained art-workers in utilising their skills for the benefit of infected and affected communities in the fight against HIV/AIDS. It also aims to mentor these art-workers so that they can apply their professional skills to the development of, for example, child friendly programmes to educate orphans and vulnerable children on issues surrounding HIV/AIDS. The objectives of the workshop process are to:

  • develop and extend the expertise of art and child care professionals engaged in creative work with children.
  • utilise the skills and experience of art professionals to effectively participate in the fight against HIV/AIDS.
  • provide an environment for free personal expression through the medium of various art forms, facilitated by trained personnel.
  • provide children with the techniques for artistic reflection and translation into the challenges and complexities surrounding HIV/AIDS.
  • provide a therapeutic experience for children in need and to mobilise the communities response to HIV/AIDS.


In addition the project conducts body mapping workshops which focus on youth and adults affected and infected by HIV/AIDS. The project draws participants from diverse communities, in particular from the HIV/AIDS support groups and clinics. According to AAAA/HEART body mapping has the potential to intervene on many levels:

  • Personal: Body mapping is primarily a tool of personal growth, healing and expression.
  • Public awareness: Exhibiting or otherwise publishing the body maps provides a window into a world of experience that nurtures respect, dignity and understanding.
  • Political advocacy: The stories ‘told’ by body maps reflect and lobby issues surrounding treatment, policy, and law. They provide powerful statements of the successes and failures of political will and access to human rights.
  • Therapeutic: Creative challenges and self-expression are one aspect of the body mapping process, ‘ownership’ of often misunderstood and mysterious (bio-medial) treatments and the functioning of the body also generate self worth and positive approaches to health psychology.
  • Educational: Body mapping requires the transfer of knowledge, for the participant, the mentor artist and for the viewer. Health, nutrition, virology, immunology, and narrative history are explored with creativity and imagination.
  • Research: Body maps give subjective expression to the bio-medical aspects of PWA. By definition the maps also provide a physical (visual) expression of ideas, memories, feelings and emotions that speak directly to the experiences of the artists/subjects. The maps are a valuable heuristic tool, which serves to mirror the relationships between medical and social researchers, which in turn determines the effectiveness of multi-disciplinary intent.

Development Issues

HIV/AIDS, Children, Youth.

Key Points

The vision of the AAAA/HEART Programmes is to contribute to the development of a culture of human rights and a better dispensation for communities touched by HIV/AIDS and to magnify the role of the cultural arts and cultural/community responses to the issues and challenges surrounding the HIV pandemic.

HIVAN’s primary purpose is to promote, conduct, and build capacity for research that is responsive to, and contributes to alleviating the circumstances of, people living with and affected by HIV and AIDS. By connecting multidisciplinary scholarship with the immediate needs and problems of health-care providers, civil society organisations, and communities, and by making relevant information accessible to them, HIVAN strives to enhance the quality of HIV and AIDS prevention, care and treatment in both the formal and informal public health systems.

Partners

HIVAN.

Contact

Bren Brophy
Cultural Arts Consultants
Artists Action Around Aids (AAAA)
Highly Effective ART (HEART) Programmes.
Communications, Arts and Advocacy Unit
HIVAN (The Centre for HIV/AIDS Networking)
University of KwaZulu-Natal
Public Affairs Annex,
King George V Avenue
Durban
4041
Tel: +27 ((0)31 260 3334
Fax: +27 (0)31 260 2013
Cell: +27 (0)83 673 456 9
brenb@hivan.org.za / admin@hivan.org.za

Eliza Moodley
elizam@hivan.org.za
HIVAN Website

HIVAN.

Source

HIVAN Website on October 10 2006.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site October 10 2006
Last Updated January 19 2007

How useful did you find this page to your work?

1 - not useful    5 - very useful

Feel free to leave us comments

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Help Seed The CI Network

Login / Regisiter

Subscribe to The Drum Beat, Contribute to Forums, Get Poll Results etc
New to CI? » Start here

Development Classifieds

Young Children and HIV/AIDS

Which of these strategies should be prioritised in supporting young children affected by HIV/AIDS? [you may choose more than one]