© 2024 WYSO
Our Community. Our Nation. Our World.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Sexual assault survivors share empowering art at Dayton exhibit

A painting by a survivor hangs on the wall and shows a crying woman.
Renee Wilde
A painting by artist Genesis is displayed at Art That Empowers.

Every 68 seconds an American is sexually assaulted. One in three girls and one in six boys will be assaulted before they turn 18 years old.

Survivors are often silenced by shame, guilt, fear, doubt and systems of power. An exhibit in Dayton gave survivors of sexual assault a way to take back their power and find community.

Artists and guests gathered April 22 at the Wholly Grounds coffee shop in Dayton to kick off the opening of the exhibit "Art That Empowers."

The exhibit, which ran through April 27, was sponsored by theYWCA Dayton Rape Crisis Center.

“We are marking Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM) by bringing awareness to the community about sexual assault, but also creating a safe space in our community for our network of survivors to showcase some of their healing journey,” said Mady DeVivo, manager of the YWCA Dayton Rape Crisis Center.

Sexual Assault Awareness Month was first federally recognized in 2001. DeVivo told the crowd gathered that it was women of color who pioneered this movement - including Black activist Tarana Burke who founded the‘me toomovement to support survivors of sexual violence, particularly young women of color.

a art piece hangs on the wall that includes a stained shirt with victim blaming phrases written over the shirt. the shirt was part of an exhibit called Art That Empowers.
Renee Wilde
Every 68 seconds an American is sexually assaulted. At the exhibit Art That Empowers, artists who have survived sexual abuse created pieces created pieces like the mixed-media one above.

The #metoo hashtag went viral and survivors across the world came forward about their experiences with sexual assault.

At the opening, survivor and author of "Peeling Away the Facade; The Long Shadow of Child Abuse" Lee Reinecke, spoke of the importance of self-love and acceptance in the healing journey, sharing something important she learned in Alcoholics Anonymous. She said they were told in recovery that they don't have to accept unacceptable behavior.

“A member shared that the one person that the one person that she regularly accepted unacceptable behavior from was herself,” Reinecke recalled. “Blaming herself when things went wrong, calling herself mean names, saying things she would never say to a friend.”

“And she realized that until she treated herself like a valued friend, she would stand in the way of her own recovery. She learned that when she treated herself with love and approval, she would progress in her recovery.”

Sexual assault survivor and artist Shay Raymond read her poem at the opening
renee wilde
Sexual assault survivor and artist Shay Raymond read her poem at the opening

Reinecke also described a powerful moment in her own recovery process that happened during a four-day Saprea retreatfor adult women who were sexually abused as minors.

“Every survivor at that retreat was allowed to select a beautiful bowl from a china cabinet. Then we were told to break it into pieces. We were then taught how to repair it with the Kintsugi method,” Reinecke said. “We put the pieces back together with lacquer resin mixed with gold.”

Kinsugi translates to golden joinery, she said, and reflects the Japanese philosophy that the value of an object isn’t in its beauty, but in its imperfections.

"The imperfections are something to celebrate, not hide," she said.

Survivors celebrated their own recovery process through art and poetry throughout opening reception. This includes performance of the below poem by Shay Raymond.

Untitled With Love

I have fallen in love with me

Self-love ain’t for the weak

I look at myself and marvel at what I see

No longer am I feeling meek

Self-love ain’t for the weak

Put me in an art museum

No longer am I feeling meek

Haters welcome let me see ‘em

Put me in an art museum

The mirror is my best audience now

Haters welcome let me see ‘em

To my reflection I take a bow

The mirror is my best audience now

I have become my own savior

To my reflection I take a bow

This kind of love has a sweet flavor

I have become my own savior

I look at myself and marvel at what I see

This kind of love has a sweet flavor

I have fallen in love with me

Tags