'Art helps me deal with my cancer diagnosis'

Wendy Brookfield sits in a chair next to a display of her artworks in white frames. She is a white woman who has short grey hair and is wearing a black and white shirt with an abstract, striped pattern and dangling earrings with a heart shaped pendant at the bottom. Several people stand behind her, including a person wearing a light brown, fleece fabric jacket, who is looking at the artworks.
Wendy Brookfield's art therapy work and sketches were displayed at the Severn Hospice in Bicton Heath [BBC]

After being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, Wendy Brookfield said she had lots of emotions.

But a referral to art therapy through the Severn Hospice, based in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, helped her deal with what she was going through.

"There is so much going on in your mind that being able to go along to art therapy, I could just get it out and get it down on paper," she said.

"It just such a good outlet for me."

Her therapy sessions led to her starting a book of sketches which she regularly filled in, sometimes during her treatment sessions.

They inspired the hospice to host its own art exhibition, built around Ms Brookfield's work and with other pieces created by patients.

"I've just found it gives me so much positivity and I kind of want to share that with people," Ms Brookfield said.

A woman's hands hold a drawing in a white frame. It depicts the trunk of a tree with long winding roots and has been sketched in a red pencil on a white background.
The red tree was sketched during one of Ms Brookfield's chemotherapy sessions [BBC]

"As a hospice, we are kind of scary to people," Rebecca Richardson, director of care, added.

"People think it is a place where people come to die and actually we do so much more.

"And we really want to connect with our communities."

Rebecca Richardson stands in a room full of artworks, some are hanging on the walls, some are in frames on tables. Rebecca is a white woman who has long grey hair with a fringe and is smiling. She is wearing a blue woollen jumper with short sleeves and a brooch of a large red poppy flower. She also wears a long blue lanyard ribbon with the logo of the Severn Hospice, which is in a love heart shape. Around her,  a woman with blonde hair and a blue dress with long sleeves examines some of the art work.
Rebecca Richardson said the hospice could be seen as a scary place but offered a range of treatments [BBC]

The event, which opened on on 4 November, was also a chance for the hospice, which costs about £10m to run each year, to raise much-needed funds.

Local artists were invited to sell their work with proceeds going to the hospice.

Among them was Karen Worrall who, as well as painting in her spare time, works as a volunteer running art therapy sessions.

She said she was inspired to give back after seeing the treatment her father received from Severn Hospice.

Karen Worrall stands in front of an easel holding a colourful artwork in a black frame. Behind her are other people, one wearing black and another in black trousers and a blue striped shirt, queueing for a cafe. Karen is a white woman with short blonde hair and is wearing a blue jumper with a scarf in an abstract white and blue pattern, she also has a necklace of coloured circles. She is also wearing a red poppy brooch.
Karen Worrall was inspired to volunteer as an art therapy leader after her father was treated at the Severn Hospice. [BBC]

"Near the end we had great support from the hospice," she said.

"I love art so I thought, right, I'll approach our lovely art therapists and see if I can help.

"When you paint, it is very mindful so you are in that moment and you can forget anything that is going on."

Ms Brookfield said she was amazed by the exhibition.

"A diagnosis is bad news, and it is a thing that so many people have to face," she said

"But if you can find good things to bring through that as well, it brings such an addition to your life."

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