Houston Chronicle

Can programs that help military save federal arts?

- By Graham Bowley |

BETHESDA, Md. — First they paint. Later, they write stories or express their emotions by playing the drums or piano.

Finally, the military service members who participat­e in arts therapy at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center create a “culminatin­g project,” a montage of shapes and words.

“This gives them a visual voice,” said Melissa Walker, one of the therapists for the Creative Forces program run by the National Endowment for the Arts in conjunctio­n with the military.

On Tuesday, the endowment will announce that the program, in place at seven locations around the country, will expand to four more.

Endowment officials describe the expansion, which has been planned for nearly two years, as a valuable enhancemen­t to a program that has shown good results with service members and veterans. They say there is no connection between the timing of the announceme­nt and the need to rally support for the federal agency as President Donald Trump threatens to eliminate it completely.

But the growth of its programs that benefit members of the military and veterans has also helped the agency build support among some Republican­s and rebut criticism that it is an elitist, left-leaning repository of woolly-headed indulgence.

“People understand we owe a deep obligation to our veterans,” said Mark Mellman, a Democratic pollster who advised John Kerry’s 2004 presidenti­al campaign. “It is political poison to take anything away from them. I can’t speak as to why they have done the program, but there is no question, because politician­s and the public are so reluctant to take anything away from vets, it would be wise to talk about the art therapy for veterans.”

Now, with the fate of the National Endowment of the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities in the hands of the Republican lawmakers controllin­g Congress, supporters of the endowments say mentioning the work they do with the military and veterans is important when lobbying lawmakers.

“It definitely resonates with Congress, as it should,” said Robert L. Lynch, president of Americans for the Arts, an advocacy group.

At the medical center in Bethesda, though, the focus is on getting better, not getting votes. Arts therapy patients have all suffered a traumatic brain injury or post-traumatic stress disorder. Organizers say the monthlong program helps them cope with haunting memories, disabiliti­es and the future.

“A lot of this population has trouble verbalizin­g what they have been through,” Walker said.

The focus at first is on painting masks, each treated as a blank slate that helps a patient explore wounds and identity. Masks line walls and a paint-spattered table in the bright therapy room. Some are fractured, others macabre, a few peaceful.

“I was kind of lost,” Chris Stowe, a retired Marine who studied oil painting and learned how to play the ukulele in the program, said in a telephone interview.

After deployment­s including Iraq and Afghanista­n, he suffered night terrors and insomnia, he said. “I found this wonderful thing that is art.”

The extent of NEA programs with some military affiliatio­n has grown since the Vietnam era, when the endowment provided a $1,980 grant to support an exhibition at West Point. Last year it gave out 25 direct military-related grants worth $499,000, and funded Creative Forces at an additional cost of $2.3 million.

The endowment stresses that its expansion in this area since the 1990s, when conservati­ve critics assailed it as elitist and irrelevant, is not some political strategy, but rather part of an effort to “increase access to the arts for all Americans.” The agency says the same broad mission underlies its decision to fund a range of projects in every congressio­nal district.

The efforts have not persuaded some conservati­ves, though, who suggest the same kind of art therapy programs for the military can be provided by private nonprofit organizati­ons and that some already are. “NEA’s involvemen­t in programs for members of the military, by themselves, do not justify the agency’s existence,” said Romina Boccia, a fellow at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation.

Creative Forces will expand to Fort Campbell on the Kentucky-Tennessee border; the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital in Tampa, Fla.; Fort Carson near Colorado Springs, Colo.; and the Naval Special Warfare Command in Virginia Beach, Va.

The NEH programs for veterans or service personnel include the Warrior Chorus, in which veterans perform classical texts and their own writing. The program has received $650,000 from the agency since 2014, including another $300,000 being announced this week.

One of its production­s, “Our Trojan War,” was staged last week in Austin,.

Marco Reininger, who served in Afghanista­n, took part in an earlier production, of Sophocles’ play “Philoctete­s.” “Seeing, through the play, how little had changed about the reality of armed conflict and the experience of the humans tasked with executing it pulled me in very deeply,” he said. “The warriors and citizens of ancient Greece had the same questions and carried the same trauma as soldiers do today.”

 ?? Justin T. Gellerson photos / New York Times ?? Walter M. Greenhalgh, director of the National Intrepid Center of Excellence, and Melissa Walker, a therapist.
Justin T. Gellerson photos / New York Times Walter M. Greenhalgh, director of the National Intrepid Center of Excellence, and Melissa Walker, a therapist.
 ??  ?? A mask designed by a veteran at Walter Reed Military Hospital.
A mask designed by a veteran at Walter Reed Military Hospital.

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