The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Artwork opens door to healing

Artist who created mural for Norristown Police Department has personal connection

- By SEAN ADAMS For The Associated Press

HARRISBURG » The presentati­on is simple: A series of monofilame­nt fishing lines hang from the ceiling, and attached to each small plastic baggies. Inside each baggie is a small plastic crystal bead.

There are 5,577 Baggies — one for each of the people who died in Pennsylvan­ia due to heroin or opioid overdoses in 2017.

The piece is titled “5577,” and is on display through Sept. 9 at the State Museum of Pennsylvan­ia as part of the museum’s Art of the State exhibit.

“I think there are so many people that are involved in this issue — and this is just Pennsylvan­ia,” said Maria Maneos, the artist behind the project. “It’s beautiful, but once you understand it, it’s horrific at the same time.”

Maneos is one of many Pennsylvan­ians with a personal connection to addiction.

“My son struggles with heroin addiction,” she said. “Smart kid, college, all that

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stuff. But when I found myself going to the Montgomery County prison to visit him, and seeing so many others just like him, I said, ‘the arts can do something here’.”

Maneos had previously done art therapy with disabled veterans and people recovering from strokes, so she then shifted to working with the incarcerat­ed. Her nonprofit organizati­on, Brush With the Law, built upon the art classes, and helps use art as therapy as well as a re-entry tool and source for community service: several inmates with the program created murals, including one for the Norristown Police Department in honor of a fallen officer.

Maneos partnered with another organizati­on, a mental health advocacy group called Hope Works, in order to complete “5577.”

“After she told us her vision of how it will represent the people who have died of opioid or drug overdose, we wanted to be part of that,” said Ameika Malcolm of Hope Works. “Everybody had a connection with that in some shape or form. Everybody had, whether it was directly or indirectly, some story that they could tell you. ‘I know somebody’, or a family member is going through this crisis, or overdosed, or experience­d the ripples of that.”

People enrolled in the Hope Works programs helped fill the Baggies for the piece, which were then installed by Maneos, Malcolm and State Museum staff and volunteers. And in every step of the process, inevitably, conversati­on arose about the epidemic, and people shared stories about their own experience­s and connection­s.

“They were able to support each other in conversati­on, Malcolm said. “It was very therapeuti­c for people who were going through loss, or whatever struggle they had at the time. “

One man in the Hope Works program, Malcolm explained, “doesn’t like to interact. But the fact that he was able to sit there and put the gems in the bag was his outlet, or his way of expressing, ‘I am out here in the world, I’m getting involved, and I have a sense of community around me.”

Beverly Lichkus, a volunteer with the State Museum who helps organize the Art of the State exhibits, said that such projects are valuable because they “allow people to have that conversati­on.”

“I’ve worked with bereavemen­t patients and cancer patients,” she said. “This is a great project because it opens conversati­on for them to heal. The healing arts help them communicat­e better and tell their story. Everyone has a story, everyone got there for a reason. It’s really important to allow that healing to happen through the arts.”

“This installati­on is obviously a very timely piece,” added Michele Ensminger, chief of exhibits at the State Museum. “It’s a focus of conversati­on everywhere around the world, not just central Pennsylvan­ia.”

Ensminger, like Maneos, has a child who suffers from addiction.

“Every time I think about this — we’re standing here unwinding these strings, that are sometimes frustratin­g,” she said. “And every time I look at one of these little crystals in a baggie, I think, ‘that is representi­ng someone’s life who lost that battle.’ It’s just very close to home for me.”

“When you read a number, and see a number, it’s completely different,” Maneos said. “The visual on this is very important, to help bring the awareness of those numbers. There are so many people struggling with this, it’s not just them by themselves. They’re not alone, and they’re remembered.”

 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO ?? Artist Maria Maneos in her home studio in Montgomery Township.
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO Artist Maria Maneos in her home studio in Montgomery Township.
 ?? OSCAR GAMBLE - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? A new mural showing Norristown police serving the community in the roll call room of the Norristown police station, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017.
OSCAR GAMBLE - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA A new mural showing Norristown police serving the community in the roll call room of the Norristown police station, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017.
 ?? OSCAR GAMBLE DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? From left, Montgomery County Commission­er Joe Gale and Maria Maneos of Brush With the Law pose in front of a newly unveiled mural in the roll call room at the Norristown police station, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017.
OSCAR GAMBLE DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA From left, Montgomery County Commission­er Joe Gale and Maria Maneos of Brush With the Law pose in front of a newly unveiled mural in the roll call room at the Norristown police station, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017.

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