Dianne Griffin, Acclaimed Filmmaker Discusses: Addiction is an Abyss—Art was the Escape.
Welcome to Earth Sayers Cinema, where we amplify the voices of transformational leaders working toward a more sustainable and compassionate world. Today's episode explores Creative High, a powerful documentary that ventures into the profound intersection of art, addiction, and recovery. This isn't just another film about substance abuse—it's an intimate journey into the lives of nine artists who have faced the abyss of addiction and discovered that creativity itself can be a pathway to healing and wholeness.
Joining us is filmmaker Dianne Griffin, co-director of Creative High alongside Adriana Marone. Dianne brings a unique dual perspective to this project: she's both an accomplished documentary cinematographer and someone in recovery herself. Her work explores themes of transformation, spirituality, and human resilience, informed by her practice of Buddhism and her belief that the creative process is fundamentally a spiritual journey. Through her nonprofit organization, Dig All Media, Dianne creates films that explore social issues and amplify marginalized voices.
Our host, Paul Steinbroner, guides this conversation with thoughtful questions that invite deep reflection. Paul's interviewing style creates space for exploring complex ideas about trauma, transformation, and the healing power of art. His observation that "being vulnerable around the right people is the ultimate courage" captures the essence of what makes this conversation, and the documentary itself, so powerful.
Creative High follows nine artists—dancers, painters, musicians, and performers—each navigating their own relationship with addiction and recovery. Their stories reveal a fundamental truth: for many artists, the creative impulse and the addictive impulse are deeply intertwined. As one artist shares, "Art through my whole using period kept me alive." Another describes addiction starkly: "Addiction is an abyss." These raw testimonies set the stage for a deeper exploration of how creativity functions not just as expression, but as survival, and ultimately, as transformation.
Throughout this episode, you'll discover how the documentary came to life over several years of intimate filming, building trust with vulnerable subjects, and witnessing both triumphs and tragedies. Dianne shares the story of Louisa, a dancer whose extraordinary vulnerability and openness create immediate connection with everyone around her. You'll hear about Kathy, a painter who returned to school in her seventies to earn her MFA after achieving sobriety, proving it's never too late for transformation. And you'll learn about Luis, a hip-hop artist whose powerful performances and creative achievements were tragically cut short by relapse and overdose—a sobering reminder that recovery is fragile and not every story ends in triumph.
The conversation explores profound themes that resonate far beyond addiction and recovery. Dianne discusses creativity as spiritual practice, quoting John Daido Loori's description of the creative process as "intuitive, nonlinear and experiential," something that "points us towards our direct nature" and "connects us to the entire universe." She shares how suffering can be a "Dharma gate"—a doorway to awakening—and how recovery allowed her to "awaken to emotional states that I was stunted in," states that continue to unfold through her creative work.
Paul and Dianne examine the role of vulnerability in both art-making and recovery, discussing how sensitivity—often seen as weakness—can actually be a profound capacity for feeling and connection. They explore how many artists are, as Paul puts it, "too tender" to simply dismiss painful experiences, leading them to initially use art to mask pain, and then substances when art alone isn't enough. The path back requires confronting personal problems directly, doing the difficult work that, as Paul candidly notes, "Nobody wants to do."