This Artist Collects Your Worst Fears and Turns Them Into Something Great
All illustrations by Julie Elman.
Julie Elman, like many artists, struggles with fear of the blank page. The creative process demands risk-taking, resilience, and messiness. An associate professor of visual communication at Ohio University, Elman understood the expectation to practice what she preached. To move beyond her fear and to explore what she was teaching her students, she conceived the Fear Project.
People submit their fears to the project鈥檚 website, and Elman visually interprets them, bringing them to life. Perhaps the most interesting part, aside from the striking visuals, is the resulting effect. The venture brings different fears together on one interface, normalizing and destigmatizing fear as a bad part of everyday life.
Though Elman admits that she is no psychologist, she posits that, to a certain degree, sharing and voicing a fear can be validating. And after validation comes solidarity. 鈥淚 can try to translate the person鈥檚 description of a fear into something visual that others can relate to,鈥 she explains.
Psychologist, author, and professor Noam Shpancer says that speaking out about difficult experiences or fears provides a sense of strength, security, and relief. Thus, one scared voice becomes a community of empowered voices. 鈥淲e tend to find solace in the knowledge that we are not alone in our troubles,鈥 he explains. In psychology, it鈥檚 well established that confronting fear is essential in learning to manage it. The Fear Project鈥檚 root in the visual only emphasizes this. 鈥淕reat art articulates for us things about ourselves and our experience that cannot be easily and well expressed otherwise,鈥 Shpancer adds. Like what Elman does: She opens a forum to explore fears among us.
She approaches each submission, each fear, the same way: Don鈥檛 overanalyze, just do.
Dubbed the 鈥渇ear collector鈥 by聽Modern Weekly, Elman describes how what began as an experimental exercise evolved into an ongoing creative undertaking. 鈥淚t didn鈥檛 take me long to get past any fears I had about pumping something out and putting it out there. The good, the bad, and the ugly鈥擨 posted them all.鈥 The subsequent pieces range from the fear of moths to the fear of peeing in front of others. She always follows her gut, creating high-impact images through the use of vibrant, screaming color.
The majority of her pieces include passages from actual submissions while others feature what is called 鈥渁semic writing.鈥 This kind of illegible, nonspecific writing adds texture and, in Elman鈥檚 opinion, captures the very core of that person鈥檚 fear. 鈥淚 imagine what the person might be saying, or shouting, at that time, and I scribble out those words without making them legible. In some way, I think this infuses the spirit of that person, and his or her fear, into the piece I鈥檓 creating.鈥 It is this relationship among fear, individual, and artist that drives the project forward, making fear acceptable and tangible.
Elman isn鈥檛 sure what makes fear so compelling. On a personal level, she says she wants to avoid dwelling in the negative and believes that fear鈥檚 universality, in contrast to the lengths we go to conceal it from others, dictates many of our choices. Ironically, still a worrier by nature, Elman understands that finding ways to push through beats the bleak alternative: 鈥淪itting at home, curled up in a ball, avoiding that very thing that scares us most.鈥
Fear, she says, either cripples or motivates, and the ones we grant control to almost always have the potential to provide us with the most memorable moments.
To see more of Elman鈥檚 鈥淔ear Project,鈥 visit her website at聽.
Alexa Strabuk
is a journalist, illustrator, multidisciplinary storyteller, and community advocate. She currently serves as communications coordinator for the nonprofit Center for Courage & Renewal.
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