Abstract:
This paper argues that for professional visual artists working in sustained engagement with
traumatic personal and collective experience, the process of art-making itself functions as
a mode of self-healing; not as clinical intervention or administered therapy, but as an
intrinsic psychological dimension emerging from within committed creative practice.
Examining three contemporary visual artists from Sri Lanka's Northern Province:
Krishnapriya Thabendran, Vinson Chanthiradas Vimal, and Suntharam Anojan, the study
explores how artists whose practice is deeply connected to personal trauma, loss, and
violence discover that the act of making simultaneously constitutes an act of psychological
processing and healing. The study investigates how traumatic experience is translated into
visual form, how memory operates within the creative process, and in what ways artistic
practice functions as a self-healing mechanism for the artist. The research adopts a
qualitative interpretive case study methodology grounded in art historical and visual culture
frameworks, generating data through iconographic analysis of selected artworks, semi-
structured interviews conducted with each artist, and close readings of exhibition texts and
artists' statements. The theoretical framework draws on Cathy Caruth's trauma theory,
Marianne Hirsch's concept of postmemory, and Dominick LaCapra's notion of working
through. The analysis reveals that each artist develops a distinctively personal practice in
response to post-war experience. Krishnapriya's micro-drawings and trace-based works
construct intimate visual spaces for mourning and remembrance. Vimal's metal sculpture,
realised through processes of melting, bending, and hammering, transforms experiences
of violence into reflective form through the physical act of making. Anojan's landscape
paintings function as sustained witness to collective loss rooted in his lived experience of
the 2009 conflict in Mullaitivu. These findings suggest that artistic and psychological
processes are not parallel but inseparable — the making is the healing. This study
concludes that professional creative engagement with traumatic experience constitutes a
culturally embedded, self-directed pathway to psychological wellbeing, positioning art not
as supplementary to post-conflict recovery but as a primary site where trauma is
encountered, processed, and transformed.