Language Creates Realities – A Blogpost by Artist, Ciara Waugh

I’m Ciara, I’m a keen artist. I study art, but there are some things you can’t just read in a book and become better for it; you need experience. And trust me, I have plenty of that (and that’s not even taking art into consideration). Art is one thing that always stands so strongly in my life. I learn information, I draw. I feel something, I draw. So, when I grew as an artist and discovered more ways to express myself creatively, I found such a release in realising what a powerful tool art can be for myself and others, when used to create change.


“Why keep language that keeps young people out?” 

  

This was the title I gave to the first piece: it was said by a young person at the residential and stuck with me. 

I am trying to convey closed off body language, curled up. Their back to a door – the door could be half open or half shut, depending on how you view it like a glass half empty half full situation. 

 All the words in the piece are labels that a young person has been called, similar to those in Our Hearings, Our Voice’s Articulate Animation

The labels are also things young people find hard to understand. They are like a door; and they can shut them out if care isn’t given to help them understand and feel safe with what’s being said.

All of this comes down to STIGMA STICKS. I see stigma as this gooey, fluid creature: something that follows a young person around, like a shadow. There’s a weight to them; carrying stigma weighs us down and most of all, it sticks. All the language surrounding a young person will feed the stigma monster.

“Language creates realities”

  

The second piece is based around feeling safe, seen and supported. Things we all deserve to feel. With the right use of language these values can ‘create realities’, a line which was in the Promise. 

We can see the effect of the ‘right’ language in the illustration: the young person at the centre has more open body language and is seen from a different perspective – above us but not looking down on anyone. Think about their body language, subtleties of dress and what that can mean, their hood is down. I wanted the young person to look more confident, as a result of their experience of language from others.   

The silhouettes form a semi-circle, almost protective, safe. Their forms are strong and built like pillars; a net of people gathered around a young person to solely support them. 

I included the bag on purpose; not a black bag, like many have experienced when within the care system, but a backpack. There’s an independence surrounding a backpack: you are going places. You can pack anything you need in there, and it’s so much more personal. 

Hidden in the shadow, is the Stigma, that we see in the first piece. It is much smaller, drowned out by all else, but still there. It may take a while to fully counter stigma in language, but that’s not to say it won’t get better, especially with the love, safety and support that even just a change of language can bring: the reality created from it.  

The young person stands above it, tall, conquering. I think we all have a chance to be that with the right people and lasting support beside us. The language we all use is such an important part of making sure we all feel safe, seen and supported.   

To view more of my artwork, visit my Instagram page: @ciaraillustr8