The Borneo Post

How art, music and dance affect your brain and body

- Bethany Brookshire

ART is not a luxury for our downtime, but an important contributo­r to physical and mental well-being, says Susan Magsamen, co-author of an upcoming book on the new field of neuroaesth­etics, which studies the brain’s responses to art.

To Magsamen, founder and executive director of the Internatio­nal Arts + Mind Lab at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, her artistic pursuits are about far more than hobbies.

“I need it for my soul and my health and my survival,” she says.

“It’s not a nice to have, it’s a have to have.”

Magsamen gardens, knits and crochets.

She writes prose and poems, and sings and hums daily to the chagrin of her husband.

Every Friday night, she and her husband get together in their living room and dance.

I spoke with Magsamen about the emerging field of neuroarts and her new book, ‘Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us’, co-wri en with Ivy Ross, vice president of design for Hardware Products at Google.

The interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Q: Why did you think that a book on art and the brain was needed?

A: Most people think about the arts or about health, but they don’t really think about arts and health together.

Q: You write in the book about many studies showing that when people are creating or viewing art, they end up in a very focused, calm state. What is it about creating art that leads to those mindful states?

A: There are some similariti­es to mindfulnes­s and meditation, and to a flow state. Part of what’s happening in those kinds of very focused spaces where you’re not thinking about 100 other things is that you’re le ing your mind go, and that brings you to a stress-free state.

Q: How do dance and music affect the body and brain. How much of the effect is creative expression, and how much is about exercise?

A: We get a lot of really positive benefits from exercise. But when you think about dance, dance is a very social activity. Cultural dances have specific uses and meanings, including ceremonies and rituals (weddings, births, rights of passage) as well as pleasure.

Cultural dances o en have a story to tell and a message to be expressed, and they are passed down generation to generation. These stories through dances are told to us when we are young, and they have great meaning for us individual­ly and as a culture. And that meaning is important for memory and for being able to do something that feels good. Also, there is an aspect of community-building that’s different from exercise.

Music’s effects on the brain

Q: One of the most wellknown effects of art on our health and mental state is the effect of music on people with dementia or Alzheimer’s. Why do you think we respond so strongly to familiar tunes, even when we can’t remember the faces of our loved ones?

A: Every week, my husband and I spend an hour or so with our cousin who has frontotemp­oral dementia. And it’s extraordin­ary how when we sing ‘You Are My Sunshine’ or ‘Amazing Grace’, she comes right back. It’s the closest thing to magic I have seen. Scientists know that music is processed in many different areas of the brain. There’s repetition in the way that music is encoded; the hippocampu­s is the region of the brain that stores short-term memory, which is o en the first region to fail for people with dementia.

Over time, memories are consolidat­ed and are stored in a distribute­d manner in the cerebral cortex.

It’s fascinatin­g that somehow our brains have figured out how to duplicate knowledge, especially informatio­n that’s really important.

Q: What do you want people to take from this book?

A: We misunderst­and the arts and aesthetics and their role in our lives. I hope that this book pulls us back, and allows us to have more of a conversati­on about the fact that we’re wired for art. We are physiologi­cally wired for art, our brains respond to it without needing to be taught. It really makes sense to understand the neurobiolo­gy, physiology and psychology of our responses to art and how that can inform practice that we do every day. I’m really hoping that the book starts a conversati­on about how this work, these arts and aesthetics, can change our lives in li le and big ways.

How to bring art into your life

In ‘Your Brain on Art’, Magsamen and Ross offer a vision of what a life lived with an aesthetic mind-set could look like. — The Washington Post

 ?? Random House — Photo by ?? ‘Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us’ by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross, available March 23, explores the effects of the arts on our brains and bodies.
Random House — Photo by ‘Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us’ by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross, available March 23, explores the effects of the arts on our brains and bodies.

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