The Sunflower Project educates young people on sexual violence and relationship abuse and empowers survivors to tell their story through artmaking.
The Sunflower Project educates young people on sexual violence and relationship abuse and empowers survivors to tell their story through artmaking.
The Sunflower Project envisions a world where all survivors are deeply supported in reclaiming their voice. By using storytelling, embodied movement, and a wide range of creative outlets, our work encourages emotional processing, fosters healing, and builds community. We aim to educate all young people about healthy relationships early in life, regardless of their sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, background, location, or socio-economic status.
The Sunflower Project is committed to the essential education, empowerment, and healing that needs to occur in communities of all kinds to ensure a healthier future for all, and fills four gaps in the fight against domestic violence and sexual assault. First, we work directly with teenagers - beginning the conversation when young people are first becoming sexually and romantically inclined. Second, we focus heavily on prevention on both the abused and abusers behalf - teaching young people of ALL genders and sexual orientations about truly healthy relationships and sexual encounters is vital to producing empathetic, kind, and healthy adults. Third, we work with survivors to find embodied practices that foster peace, acceptance, and celebration of their identity as a survivor after they’ve recovered from the primary crisis and trauma of the abuse they underwent. And fourth, we provide artmaking and art sharing as lifelong tools to help people work against the misogynistic and homophobic powers of the world which will confront them their whole lives.
We address these service gaps through our programs:
The Sunflower Project envisions a world where all survivors are deeply supported in reclaiming their voice. By using storytelling, embodied movement, and a wide range of creative outlets, our work encourages emotional processing, fosters healing, and builds community. We aim to educate all young people about healthy relationships early in life, regardless of their sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, background, location, or socio-economic status.
The Sunflower Project is committed to the essential education, empowerment, and healing that needs to occur in communities of all kinds to ensure a healthier future for all, and fills four gaps in the fight against domestic violence and sexual assault. First, we work directly with teenagers - beginning the conversation when young people are first becoming sexually and romantically inclined. Second, we focus heavily on prevention on both the abused and abusers behalf - teaching young people of…