Wool Over Their Eyes
( 11" x 2.5" x 3")
Materials: Air-dry clay, wood, Acrylic Paint, Wool Fabric
The Escape of Time
( 14" x 5" x 5.5" )
Wood, Air-dry clay
The sculpture, The Escape of Time, reflects the pressure from society to achieve the ideal form of success by such a young age, creating individuals to feel as if there is not enough time. The Escape of Time visually communicates the need to go to college, find the perfect career, and make the money at such a young age, that it almost feels time is escaping you and that there is not enough of it. This in return has affected adolescent mental health. Overall, The Escape of Time sculpture reflects an hourglass, as the human bust is fading into nothingness to show the price we pay for the pressure to succeed.
“With higher exposure to the “success” of others and fewer coping skills than generations reared through hardship, America’s teen population is increasingly falling victim to bouts of anxiety and depression that are not just chronic, but debilitating.”
https://www.claudiablackcenter.com/the-price-we-pay-for-the-pressure-to-succeed/
“Lead author Thomas Curran, PhD, of the University of Bath says that this is the first study to examine generational differences in perfectionism—which he and his co-author Andrew Hill, PhD, of York St John University, define as, “an irrational desire to achieve along with being overly critical of oneself and others.”
“This increase in perfectionism could very well be affecting the psychological health of today’s college students, according to Hill, who cited higher levels of depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts than a decade ago.”
https://thriveworks.com/blog/pressure-succeed-negatively-impact-young-peoples-mental-health/
Wool Over Their Eyes
“Although the brain continues to develop throughout life, children’s brains are far more impressionable (or plastic) than adult brains, meaning that they are both more open to learning and to being shaped by outside factors.”
https://digitalwellnesslab.org/parents/brain-development/
“Media play an important role in children’s environment and subsequently affect children’s developing brain.”
https://digitalwellnesslab.org/parents/brain-development/
“As the brain isn’t fully developed until young adulthood, children’s media use can have a big impact on how their brains process information, outwardly affecting how they react to and remember events in any given situation.”
In Process Pictures
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