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Applicant: Buddhaporn Srisupawat  

Application: PhD Art and Design (Applied Research in Health) for Sep 2025 Intake

 

Topic/ Title: Transformative Abstract-Visual Meditation (TAM): Stimulating Creativity with Art for Wellbeing

 

Research Centre:

  • School of Arts and Humanities/Department of Media, Humanities and the Arts/Centre for Cultural Ecologies in Art, Design and Architecture/Centre for Experimental Practice (CXP)/ Creative Health Hub

  • School of Human and Health Sciences/Centre for Applied Research in Health

Theme: Arts and Social Sciences methods applied to topics in health 

Field: An interdisciplinary study combining Contemporary Arts, Aesthetics (Transformative Abstraction e.g. bokeh, long-time exposure, motion blur), Visual Perception, Positive Psychology, and Wellbeing

 

Potential Advisors: 

Professor Dr Gareth Hudson:

School of Arts and Humanities

Member, Centre for Cultural Ecologies in Art, Design and Architecture

Centre for Experimental Practices (CXP)

Senior Lecturer, Department of Media, Humanities and the Arts

​Email G.Hudson@hud.ac.uk

Research Interests: The Sublime in philosophy, Video Art history and practice, The Moving Image in modern culture, Spirituality, Practice as research, Affect, feeling and emotion, The philosophical and scientific engagement with worlds seen, unseen, and imagined, Lens-based media

Professor Dr Rowan Bailey:

Reader in Cultural Theory and Practice

Reader, Department of Media, Humanities and the Arts

School of Arts and Humanities

Director, Centre for Cultural Ecologies in Art, Design and Architecture

Member, Sustainable Living Research Centre

Centre for Biomimetic Societal Futures

Creative Health Hub

Email R.Bailey@hud.ac.uk

Research Interests: Creative health approaches, Art education, The phenomenon of the brainbody in art, philosophy, literature, science and curation.

Professor Dr Mike Lucock:

Professor of Clinical Psychology,

Professor, Department of Nursing

School of Human and Health Sciences

Member, Centre for Applied Research in Health

Email m.lucock@hud.ac.uk

Research Interests: Psychological Therapies, self-help, self-management, Mental health and wellbeing, Mental Health assessment, Psychological therapies process and outcomes research

Professor Michael Doyle:

Professor in Mental Health Research, Department of Nursing

School of Human and Health Sciences

Member, Centre for Applied Research in Health

Email M.Doyle2@hud.ac.uk

Research Interests: Mental health and wellbeing, Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy, Suicide prevention

Qualifications, Passion & Motivation:

Art is my soul,

Design is my breath,

and Media is my life.

 

The nexus of my academic background with three degrees in media fields, my 20 years of work experience in media production, together with my about 20 years of academic profession at American universities, trigger an epiphany that art, design, and media have embedded, engaged, and extended my life’s experiences.

Reasons to choose University of Huddersfield:

I endeavour to complete the Doctor of Philosophy in Art and Design specifically at University of Huddersfield due to:

  1. Prestigious university in Arts and Humanities as well as Art, Performing Arts & Design: within the top 288 of current QS global rankings, and 501-600 of current Times Higher Education global rankings 

  2. Perceptive Integration of Art and interdisciplinary fields: challenging and extending the potential of arts to make a difference

  3. Intensive Art-Based Research Training within a 3-year timeframe and engulfed with Huddersfield heritage: worth for academic investment as well as life experiences 

Career Ambition: 

The doctoral study in Art and Design for Mental Health and Wellbeing will provide me with the skills and insight to mentor others in creative and transformative experiences and thereby contribute further to the body of knowledge so critical to the understanding of the interconnections between Arts and Human Wellbeing. The fulfillment of an Art and Design PhD is not just for the sake of my own growth but for the greater good of others, as well.

Spoon Multi Bokeh_DSC1020_Aurora HDR Med.jpg

Abstract Photographic Artwork 

inspired to apply on TAM project, 

demonstrating on form became formless

Series: Transformative Abstraction

Photographer: Buddhaporn Srisupawat

Frok LS 3_DSC1446_Aurora HDR Med.jpg
Frok LS 1_DSC1409_Aurora HDR Med.jpg
Frok CU 3_DSC1423_Aurora HDR Med.jpg
Frok CU 7_DSC1464_Aurora HDR Med.jpg
Frok CU Creative 2_DSC1486_Aurora HDR Med.jpg
Frok Motion 88_DSC1482_Aurora HDR Med.jpg

The study of a Fork:

Artistic Experimentation on TAM project, 

envisaging the interconnections

between physical perception and mind awareness

by using macro photography

with in-camera practice

Title: Fork

Series: Transformative Abstraction

Photographer: Buddhaporn Srisupawat

About TAM

Abstract/ Synopsis:

When abstraction, minimalism, and photo-videography are fused, they amazingly create phenomenal art forms in terms of simplicity, beauty, transcendence as well as endless imagination. Inspired by abstract minimal art and motivated by art for wellbeing, this empirical study will use triplet series of abstract photo and video art as visual meditations in an attempt to experimentally boost wellbeing through a process coined Transformative Abstract-Visual Meditation (TAM).

 

In Thailand, the current suicidal rates and juvenile delinquency indicate critical mental health issues.  Positive mental health and creative mind-set are key factors to avoid committing suicide. TAM, therefore, is a proposed art for wellbeing project for creative stimulation especially among juveniles.

 

The main creative component of TAM will be the triptych visual abstraction envisaged as three stages of mind perception - unconsciousness (figurative long shot), consciousness (figurative close up), and semi subconsciousness (abstract extreme close up). The experiments will mainly rely on macro photography with in-camera practices and physical variables to achieve different kinds of formative shapes, from form to formless. The artistic research will investigate the stimulating impacts of these figurative/abstract  transformations with different colour characteristics, blurry effects, along with sequential orders.

 

The outcome of TAM is to examine the positive impact of stimuli for creative capabilities through experimental wellbeing. Sixty (Thai or British) high school/ college students will be recruited to participate in this empirical study based on phenomenology and art-based expression. In addition, it will clarify whether colour styles, blurry effects, or sequential orders have the most and least impacts on creativity as the main theme of experiential wellbeing.

Objectives & Rationales:

  1. To extend the body of knowledge about abstract Art for Wellbeing. TAM will underpin the use of photographic abstract art form through meditational integration in a different setting, stimuli, and approach from the previous study by Nielsen et al. (2017) on visual art for wellbeing generator in the Denmark hospitals with 98 patients via mix-methods.

  2. To allow participants to creatively experiment with photo-video art forms as the interconnections between physical perception and mind awareness. TAM will contribute the transformative visualizations; not only from figurative to abstract, but from formalism (form) to expressionism (formless) in terms of simplicity, beauty, and transcendence.

  3. To promote better mental health in an educational institution. TAM could be applied to instill creative mind-sets among students coping with anxiety, stress, and post COVID-19 pandemic impacts as well as stimulate creative capabilities among students on a regular basis.

The current suicidal rates and juvenile delinquency indicate critical mental health issues as the following:

  • Thai teenagers are the main casualties of suicide (Mala & Wipatayotin, 2019) and the third cause of death (Kim, 2023) nation wide.  Thailand experienced a 22% increase in suicidal rates last year (Bangkok Post, 2021; Thai PBS World, 2020) and was ranked number 1 in ASEAN and 32 in the world for suicide (The Thaiger & The Nation, 2020) with overall increasing suicidal rates within recent three years (Department of Health, Thailand, 2020, Suparum, K. & Kamsa-ard, S., 2023,) resonating critical mental health issues.  

  • Similar to Thailand, British high school juveniles  also suffer from mental health symptoms due to the rigorous long-term lockdown based on the UK government report (Office for Health Improvement and Disparities, 2021). Nonetheless, art programs for teenagers have been proven to boost mental health in terms of stimulating motivation, self-esteem and positive thinking (Duncan, n.d.; Wright et al., 2013). 

  • Last year, there was a shocking incident of juvenile delinquent – a 14-year-old gunner killed 2 deaths and 5 injured at Siam Paragon department store in Bangkok.

​Positive mental health and creative mind-set are key factors to avoid committing suicide, as divergent thinking could reduce mental health symptoms (A. Beckstein, Sept, 15, 2024, personal communication).

 

As teenagers are the main casualties, TAM collaborated with University of Huddersfield could extend to the international impacts by leveraging art-based research to make a difference – re-examining, resolving or relieving – on the specific critical mental health issues in Thailand. Alternatively, TAM could be also beneficial to reinforce the new national policy of Health Promotion by enhancing mental health (Department of Health and Social Care, 2021) for healthy and sustainable lifestyles among British juveniles.

 ​

Research Process & Methodology: 

The Transformative Abstract-Visual Meditation (TAM) project is composed of the following components:

​1. Artistic Experimentation: Creating visual stimuli envisaging links between perception and mind

The creation of abstract phot-video art forms will be used as visual stimuli through the empirical study

 

Triptych Abstract Photography

As the main production techniques, the 360-degree macro photography will be utilised in search of composition as well as blurry effect for the aesthetic abstraction through several physical variables—ranging from distance (focal), time (exposure) and vibration (camera shakes).

Inspired by abstract paintings (Kandinsky, Mondrian, Rothko, and Pollock), abstract photos (Strand, Cunningham, and Leiter) and abstract video art (Rythmus 21, Baraka, Koyaanisqatsi, Powaqqatsi, and Naqoyqatsi), the transformative abstraction of TAM artwork could seemingly envisage the submergence into unrealistic or surrealistic realm, where only the mind can wander through.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The study of a Fork:

Artistic Experimentation inspired to apply on TAM project, demonstrating on shot variation through different physical variables so that form became formless as link between perception and mind 

Title: Fork

Series: Transformative Abstraction

Photographer/ Researcher: Buddhaporn Srisupawat

To convey the 3 stages of perception, the triptych photographic abstraction will epitomise the interconnections between physical perception and mind awareness, possibly fusing with meditation, as the following analogy:

  • The representation of Unconscious stage (Unaware of any particular thing) as Long Shot (LS) of figurative subjects .

  • The representation of Conscious stage (Focusing on one thing) as Medium Shot (MS) of figurative subjects .

  • The representation of Semi-Subconscious stage (Not thinking about anything, but deep into the subliminal mind) as Extreme Closeup (ECU) of (non-figurative) abstract forms in the same series.

Serving as both a paintbrush and a canvas simultaneously, a camera functions as a tool for creative abstract expression. All physical variables affected transformative abstraction - distance (focal), time (exposure) and vibration (camera shakes)., will be documented systematically to reflect Practice as Research. The artworks  then will serve as visual stimuli for the Art for Wellbeing Research.

2. Art for Wellbeing Research: Searching for impacts of visual meditation on creativity

The use of abstract photo-video as visual meditation for creative stimulation regarded      as experiential wellbeing will be examined via an on-site photo-video art exhibition at a selected college.

Research Methodology/ Design

Two experimental case studies will be used to investigate on students’ wellbeing in relation to their artistic experiences along with visual art as meditation from art expression and phenomenology using mixed-methods via an onsite photo-video art exhibition.

  • Study 1 will use a quantitative approach to examine which visual stimuli (colour characteristics, blurry effects, or juxtaposition) will stimulate creativity using Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (TTCT) on control group and test group.

  • Study 2 will use a qualitative approach using selected favourable Transformative Abstract Videos (converted from photos to video clips) in order to unveil further insight into the creative capabilities which cannot be measured by the TTCT from Study 1. The qualitative approach, therefore, will be employed by the following:

  • In-depth interviews

  • Viewing visual stimuli with or without Visual Meditation

  • Art intervention  through creative self-expression of art making

Research Ethic:

IRB approval will be mandatory as the study uses human participant.

 

Goal & Expectation:

The ultimate outcome of this study is to explore if the utilisation of TAM will have a positive impact on creative capabilities. In addition, this artistic research will also identify which factor (colour styles, blurry effects or sequential juxtapositions) has the most and least impact on creativity as the main theme of the wellbeing experience.

 

Besides, the body knowledge from TAM could be disseminated via serial publications with tentative titles such as: Psychedelic Colour as Creative Stimulation, Ambiguity as a Creative Stimulation, and Juxtapositions as Creative Stimulation. The artwork of TAM served as the visual stimuli could be also presented through exhibitions.

At least, the outcomes could introduce the abstract art meditation as a self-art therapy to practice on a daily basis like ‘a (visual) meditation a day keeps the psychologist away’.

Me, PhD Art and
Design & TAM
@ University of Huddersfield

3-min Self-intro Movie

TAM is a combination of art, psychology, and meditation.
The artistic experimentation of TAM is art for the sake of art.  
However, the results of art-based research are really for the betterment of humanity—stimulation of creative capabilities as experiential wellbeing.

Anchor 1

Artistic Experimentation on TAM project, 

demonstrating on

bokeh and motion blur effects

by using macro photography

with in-camera practice

through different physical variables

so that form became formless

Series: Transformative Abstraction

Photographer: Buddhaporn Srisupawat

Let’s Work Together

41/225 Maysa Condo # 404, Huahin Soi 7, Huahin, Prachuap Khiri khan, Thailand 77110

Tel: +66(8) 9894-4280

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