Oregon Art Beat
Turning MRIs into artwork: How an Oregon artist, Lindsey Holcomb, transforms pain into beauty.
Clip: Season 27 Episode 2 | 9m 13sVideo has Closed Captions
Transforming MRIs into artwork, Lindsey Holcomb is helping people cope with multiple sclerosis.
After her MS diagnosis, Oregon artist Lindsey Holcomb began painting MRIs — first her own, then 400 others around the world — turning pain into beauty. But the intricate work of the MRI paintings and the emotional weight of people’s stories have taken a toll on Holcomb. She’s now leaning into a more carefree series of abstract artwork that’s easier on her body and spirit.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Oregon Art Beat is a local public television program presented by OPB
Oregon Art Beat
Turning MRIs into artwork: How an Oregon artist, Lindsey Holcomb, transforms pain into beauty.
Clip: Season 27 Episode 2 | 9m 13sVideo has Closed Captions
After her MS diagnosis, Oregon artist Lindsey Holcomb began painting MRIs — first her own, then 400 others around the world — turning pain into beauty. But the intricate work of the MRI paintings and the emotional weight of people’s stories have taken a toll on Holcomb. She’s now leaning into a more carefree series of abstract artwork that’s easier on her body and spirit.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Oregon Art Beat
Oregon Art Beat is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(gentle music) - Multiple sclerosis has shaped how I create, why I create.
(gentle music continues) When I first saw my MRI in that neurology office, I'll never forget it, it was a fearful moment.
Later, I painted an abstract interpretation of my MRI.
(gentle music continues) When I finished it, I felt a lot better, and I felt like I could maybe digest things a little bit more the next day.
And it was something that I shared on my social media.
The National MS Society shared it on their channels, and it catapulted me into art.
(serene music continues) I've just painted my 399th brain.
(serene music continues) I've worked with people in almost every US state and about 14 countries.
(serene music continues) Hey.
- Hi.
- Good to see you.
Yeah, have a seat.
Sorry, there's Pyrenees hair.
- That's okay.
(both chuckle) - [Lindsey] Is this your most recent image?
- [Stephanie] It is the most recent.
- What are you hoping to see colorwise?
- I love gold and emerald, purple, teal, pink.
When I have my MRIs, because I'm claustrophobic, and they put that helmet on your head, and that's just terrifying.
So while I go in, I imagine that there's a octopus wrapped around my head, comforting me, and that has helped me with my anxiety.
So, you can have fun with that shape, if you want.
It was hard because my dad was also diagnosed with MS, and he passed away when he was 59.
So to get the diagnosis, it was scary, it was terrifying.
Thanks for having me.
The fact that I'm given a chance to turn this terrible disease into something beautiful, to give some sort of power back to myself, there's a lot of emotions with that.
(soulful music) - Alcohol ink, there's a lot, that's a surprise.
This is the making of octopus tentacles.
(soulful music continues) What I've just done here is cut out the lesions that are highlighted on Stephanie's MRI with a wood-burning pen.
And what I do next is probably my favorite part.
I'll line them in this gold ink.
It's the nod to Kintsugi, which is a process in Japan that repairs a broken ceramic vessel with gold lining the crack, basically highlighting the vessel's history and celebrating it, versus trying to hide it or tossing in the entire vessel away.
(soulful music continues) It feels like applying a balm to what we worry about most, which are the lesions showing up in our MRI.
(soulful music continues) My grandma was a seamstress.
I have put her thread on almost every single one of my artworks.
That's kind of my way of honoring her.
In addition to the MRI paintings being very heavy, heady emotionally, there's a lot of details that I recognize now are not going to be something that I'm going to be able to do indefinitely.
I do get a lot of joint stiffness, fatigue, cognitive fog.
Spasticity affects my fine motor ability.
MS can affect my vision in a way where it's almost like I'm looking through a torn tissue paper.
There's, occasionally, double vision.
(serene music) I've challenged myself to create with my eyes closed.
I just kind of have to be at peace with whatever I'm able to do on the day that I wake up on.
(serene music continues) Where I'm at in 2025, I'd say that I space out the amount of MRI paintings that I do.
(sweet music) I started a natural ink series this last summer.
(sweet music continues) This is a lot easier to work on.
Less detailed.
(sweet music continues) And it's something that I can see well on a good vision day, on a bad vision day, and it's turned into something that has been fun with my children, where they're telling me what shapes they're finding.
- And up there, there's an eye.
And then, over there, I see like a smiley face with one eye kind of thing.
(sweet music continues) - It felt triumphant to be able to do these really smooth, large shapes.
(sweet music continues) Before MS, I come from an administration and events background, and so, you know, it kind of is your role to take on everybody else's stress.
(sweet music continues) My joy is much better and bigger, pursuing a more creative path.
(car humming) (jazzy music) When people get my artwork, I think my favorite thing that has been shared is that waiting for it kind of feels like a holiday morning or a birthday.
(music continues) (door thumps) Because they're excited to see their MRI.
And we do not get that moment as a patient.
Hi.
(chuckles) - [Stephanie] Hi.
- [Lindsey] I got a painting for you.
- [Stephanie] Oh, wow.
- [Lindsey] New MRI.
- [Stephanie] That's phenomenal (emotional).
I love it.
I see the octopus.
- [Lindsey] Uh-huh.
- [Stephanie] Oh, wow.
- [Lindsey] I love the octopus so much.
I had so much fun with that.
- [Stephanie] Lindsey, this is stunning.
(sniffs) I feel like, I'm not alone.
(sniffs) It's just another step in my healing, a very, very beautiful step.
So I'm... obviously overwhelmed with gratitude and emotions, so.
(sniffs) I think I need a hug here.
(chuckles) - [Lindsey] Yes.
Hug!
- [Stephanie] I'm like lost for words.
- [Lindsey] Oh my gosh.
Of course.
It was my pleasure.
Oh my gosh.
- [Stephanie] It's amazing.
(door clicks) - [Lindsey] Hey, guys.
- Hey.
- Welcome home.
How was school today?
- It was good.
- It was good.
Hey, you.
(tender music) MS really refocused what is most important to me, and that is having energy for my young, growing family, and for things that feed my soul.
(tender music continues) (music slows) (music ends)
This Oregon artist became an icon through intuition, classical training and Native wisdom
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S27 Ep2 | 10m 25s | Rick Bartow went from a small town Oregon kid to having his art work in over 100 museums. (10m 25s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipSupport for PBS provided by:
Oregon Art Beat is a local public television program presented by OPB
















