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Wikipedia

Art therapy

Art therapy (not to be confused with arts therapy, which includes other creative therapies such as drama therapy and music therapy) is a distinct discipline that incorporates creative methods of expression through visual art media. Art therapy, as a creative arts therapy profession, originated in the fields of art and psychotherapy and may vary in definition.

Art therapy
Two convict artists draw designs of carpets on graph paper at Industrial Workshops of Central Jail Faisalabad, Faisalabad, Pakistan, in 2010
MeSHD001155
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Edited by: Samar Jammoul

There are three main ways that art therapy is employed. The first one is called analytic art therapy. Analytic art therapy is based on the theories that come from analytical psychology, and in more cases, psychoanalysis.[1] Analytic art therapy focuses on the client, the therapist, and the ideas that are transferred between the both of them through art.[1] Another way that art therapy is utilized is art psychotherapy. This approach focuses more on the psychotherapist and their analysis of their clients' artwork verbally.[1] The last way art therapy is looked at is through the lens of art as therapy. Some art therapists practicing art as therapy believe that analyzing the client's artwork verbally is not essential, therefore they stress the creation process of the art instead.[1] In all of these different approaches to art therapy, the art therapist's client goes on the journey to delve into their inner thoughts and emotions by the use of paint, paper and pen, clay, sand, fabric, or other media.[1]

Art therapy can be used to help people improve cognitive and sensory motor function, self-esteem, self awareness, and emotional resilience.[2] It may also aide in resolving conflicts and reduce distress.

Current art therapy includes a vast number of other approaches such as person-centered, cognitive, behavior, Gestalt, narrative, Adlerian, and family. The tenets of art therapy involve humanism, creativity, reconciling emotional conflicts, fostering self-awareness, and personal growth.[3]

History

In the history of mental health treatment, art therapy (combining studies of psychology and art) emerged much later as a new field. This type of unconventional therapy is used to cultivate self-esteem and awareness, improve cognitive and motor abilities, resolve conflicts or stress, and inspire resilience in patients.[2] It invites sensory, kinesthetic, perceptual, and sensory symbolization to address issues that verbal psychotherapy cannot reach.[2] Although art therapy is a relatively young therapeutic discipline, its roots lie in the use of the arts in the 'moral treatment' of psychiatric patients in the late 18th century.[4]

Art therapy as a profession began in the mid-20th century, arising independently in English-speaking and European countries. Art had been used at the time for various reasons: communication, inducing creativity in children, and in religious contexts.[1] The early art therapists who published accounts of their work acknowledged the influence of aesthetics, psychiatry, psychoanalysis, rehabilitation, early childhood education, and art education, to varying degrees, on their practices.[4]

The British artist Adrian Hill coined the term art therapy in 1942.[5] Hill, recovering from tuberculosis in a sanatorium, discovered the therapeutic benefits of drawing and painting while convalescing. He wrote that the value of art therapy lay in "completely engrossing the mind (as well as the fingers)…releasing the creative energy of the frequently inhibited patient", which enabled the patient to "build up a strong defence against his misfortunes". He suggested artistic work to his fellow patients. That began his art therapy work, which was documented in 1945 in his book, Art Versus Illness.[6]

 
Edward Adamson, "the father of art therapy in Britain"[7]

The artist Edward Adamson, demobilised after WW2, joined Adrian Hill to extend Hill's work to the British long stay mental hospitals. Other early proponents of art therapy in Britain include E. M. Lyddiatt, Michael Edwards, Diana Raphael-Halliday and Rita Simons. The British Association of Art Therapists was founded in 1964.[8]

U.S. art therapy pioneers Margaret Naumburg and Edith Kramer began practicing at around the same time as Hill. Naumburg, an educator, asserted that "art therapy is psychoanalytically oriented" and that free art expression "becomes a form of symbolic speech which ... leads to an increase in verbalization in the course of therapy."[9] Edith Kramer, an artist, pointed out the importance of the creative process, psychological defenses, and artistic quality, writing that "sublimation is attained when forms are created that successfully contain ... anger, anxiety, or pain."[10] Other early proponents of art therapy in the United States include Elinor Ulman, Robert "Bob" Ault, and Judith Rubin. The American Art Therapy Association was founded in 1969.[11]

National professional associations of art therapy exist in many countries, including Brazil, Canada, Finland, Lebanon, Israel, Japan, the Netherlands, Romania, South Korea, and Sweden. International networking contributes to the establishment of standards for education and practice.[12]

 
Art Therapist process work

Diverse perspectives exist on history of art therapy, which complement those that focus on the institutionalization of art therapy as a profession in Britain and the United States.[13][14][15]

Definitions

 
An art therapist watches over a person with mental health problems during an art therapy workshop in Senegal.

There are various definitions of the term art therapy.[16]: 1 

The British Association of Art Therapists defines art therapy as: "a form of psychotherapy that uses art media as its primary mode of expression and communication." They also add that "clients who are referred to an art therapist need not have previous experience in art, the art therapist is not primarily concerned with making an aesthetic or diagnostic assessment of the client's image."[17][18]

The American Art Therapy Association defines art therapy as: "an integrative mental health and human services profession that enriches the lives of individuals, families, and communities through active art-making, creative p[19] rocess, applied psychological theory, and human experience within a psychotherapeutic relationship."[20]

Uses

As a regulated mental health profession, art therapy is employed in many clinical and other settings with diverse populations. It is increasingly recognized as a valid form of therapy. Art therapy can also be found in non-clinical settings, as well as in art studios and in creativity development workshops. Licensing for art therapists can vary from state to state with some recognizing art therapy as a separate license and some licensing under a related field such a professional counseling or mental health counseling.[21] Art therapists must have a master's degree that includes training in the creative process, psychological development, and group therapy, and they must complete a clinical internship.[22] Art therapists may also pursue additional credentialing through the Art Therapy Credentials Board.[23] Art therapists work with populations of all ages and with a wide variety of disorders and diseases. Art therapists provide services to children, adolescents, and adults, whether as individuals, couples, families, or groups.

Using their evaluative and psychotherapy skills, art therapists choose materials and interventions appropriate to their clients' needs and design sessions to achieve therapeutic goals and objectives. Other ways that therapists may choose to use art therapy with their clients include types of art like drawing self-portraits, closing their eyes while drawing, spiral drawing, and lastly drawing their emotions.[24] They use the creative process to help their clients increase insight, cope with stress, work through traumatic experiences, increase cognitive, memory and neurosensory abilities, improve interpersonal relationships and achieve greater self-fulfillment. The activities an art therapist chooses to do with clients depend on a variety of factors such as their mental state or age. Art therapists may draw upon images from resources such as the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism to incorporate historical art and symbols into their work with patients. Depending on the state, province, or country, the term "art therapist" may be reserved for those who are professionals trained in both art and therapy and hold a master or doctoral degree in art therapy or certification in art therapy obtained after a graduate degree in a related field.[25] Other professionals, such as mental health counselors, social workers, psychologists, and play therapists, optionally combine art-making with basic psychotherapeutic modalities in their treatment. Therapists may better understand a client's absorption of information after assessing elements of their artwork.[26]

A systemic literature review compiled and evaluated different research studies, some of which are listed below. Overall, this survey publication revealed that both the high level of variability (such as incorporating talk therapy) and limited number of studies done with certified art therapists made it difficult to generalize over findings. Despite these limitations, art therapy has, to an extent, proved its efficacy in relieving symptoms and improving quality of life.[27]

General illness

Art-making is a common activity used by many people to cope with illness. Art and the creative process can alleviate many illnesses (cancer, heart disease, influenza, etc.). This form of therapy helps benefit those with mental illnesses as well (chronic depression, anxiety disorders, bipolar disorders, etc.). It is difficult to measure the efficacy of art therapy as it treats various mental illnesses to different degrees; although, people can escape the emotional effects of various illness through art making and many creative methods.[28] Sometimes people cannot express the way they feel, as it can be difficult to put into words, and art can help people express their experiences. "During art therapy, people can explore past, present and future experiences using art as a form of coping".[28] Art can be a refuge for the intense emotions associated with illness; there are no limits to the imagination in finding creative ways to express emotions.

Hospitals have started studying the influence of arts on patient care and found that participants in art programs have better vitals and less difficulty sleeping. Artistic influence does not need to be participation in a program, but studies have found that a landscape picture in a hospital room had reduced need for narcotic pain killers and less time in recovery at the hospital.[28] In addition, either looking at or creating art in hospitals helped stabilize vital signs, speed up the healing process, and in general, bring a sense of hope and soul to the patient. Family, care workers, doctors and nurses are also positively affected.

Using art therapy, it can also be a good way for those with general illnesses to express their feelings and emotions through art, when it may or may not be difficult to explain their feelings through words. Art helps give security to emotions to those if they are not comfortable sharing their emotions to others, but can trust a canvas or sheet of paper to hold onto those emotions.

Subjective cancer symptoms

Many studies have been conducted on the benefits of art therapy on cancer patients. Art therapy has been found useful for supporting patients during the stress of such things as chemotherapy treatment.[29]

Art therapists have conducted studies to understand why some cancer patients turn to art making as a coping mechanism and a tool to creating a positive identity outside of being a cancer patient. Women in the study participated in different art programs ranging from pottery and card making to drawing and painting. The programs helped them regain an identity outside of having cancer, lessened emotional pain from their ongoing fight with cancer, and also gave them hope for the future.

In a study involving women facing cancer-related difficulties such as fear, pain, altered social relationships, it was found that:

Engaging in different types of visual art (textiles, card making, collage, pottery, watercolor, acrylics) helped these women in 4 major ways. First, it helped them focus on positive life experiences, relieving their ongoing preoccupation with cancer. Second, it enhanced their self-worth and identity by providing them with opportunities to demonstrate continuity, challenge, and achievement. Third, it enabled them to maintain a social identity that resisted being defined by cancer. Finally, it allowed them to express their feelings in a symbolic manner, especially during chemotherapy.[28]

Another study showed those who participated in these types of activities were discharged earlier than those who did not participate.[28]

Furthermore, another study revealed the healing effects of art therapy on female breast cancer patients. Studies revealed that relatively short-term art therapy interventions significantly improved patients' emotional states and perceived symptoms.[27]

Studies have also shown how the emotional distress of cancer patients has been reduced when utilizing the creative process. The women made drawings of themselves throughout the treatment process while also doing yoga and meditating; these actions combined helped to alleviate some symptoms.[28]

Another study, with 111 participants, looked at the efficacy of mindfulness-based art therapy, combining meditation with art.[30] The study used measurements such as quality of life, physical symptoms, depression, and anxiety to evaluate the efficacy of the intervention. This yielded positive results that there was a significant decrease in distress and significant improvement in quality of life.

A review of 12 studies investigating the use of art therapy in cancer patients by Wood, Molassiotis, and Payne (2010) investigated the symptoms of emotional, social, physical, and global functioning, and spiritual concerns of cancer patients. They found that art therapy can improve the process of psychological readjustment to the change, loss, and uncertainty associated with surviving cancer. It was also suggested that art therapy can provide a sense of "meaning-making" through the physical act of creating the art. When given five individual sessions of art therapy once per week, art therapy was shown to be useful for personal empowerment by helping the cancer patients understand their own boundaries in relation to the needs of other people. In turn, those who had art therapy treatment felt more connected to others and found social interaction more enjoyable than individuals who did not receive art therapy treatment. Furthermore, art therapy improved motivation levels, ability to discuss emotional and physical health, general well-being, and increased global quality of life in cancer patients.[31]

In sum, relatively short-term intervention of art therapy that is individualized to patients has the potential to significantly improve emotional state and quality of life, while reducing perceived symptoms relating to the cancer diagnosis.[27]

Disaster relief

Art therapy has been used in a variety of traumatic experiences, including disaster relief and crisis intervention. Art therapists have worked with children, adolescents and adults after natural and manmade disasters, https://us.jkp.com/products/art-therapy-in-response-to-natural-disasters-mass-violence-and-crises them to make art in response to their experiences. Some suggested strategies for working with victims of disaster include: assessing for distress or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD),[32] normalizing feelings, modeling coping skills, promoting relaxation skills, establishing a social support network, and increasing a sense of security and stability.[33]: 137ff [34]: 120ff 

Dementia

Although art therapy seems to help patients with dementia,[citation needed] a recent systematic review did not find consistent support.[35] It is important that the art tools are easy to use and relatively simple to understand, since mobility can also be a problem. [36] Although art therapy helps with behavioral issues, it does not appear to affect worsening mental abilities.[37] Tentative evidence supports benefits with respect to quality of life.[38] Art therapy had no clear results on affecting memory or emotional well-being scales.[39] However, Alzheimer's Association states that art and music can enrich people's lives and allow for self expression.[40] D.W Zaidel, a researcher and therapist at VAGA, claims that engagement with art can stimulate specific areas of the brain involved in language processing and visuo-spatial perception, two cognitive functions which decline significant in dementia patients.[41]

Autism

Art therapy is increasingly recognized to help address challenges of people with autism.[3] Art therapy may address core symptoms of autism spectrum disorders by promoting sensory regulation, supporting psychomotor development and facilitating communication.[42] Art therapy is also thought to promote emotional and mental growth by allowing self expression, visual communication, and creativity.[43] Most importantly, studies have found that painting, drawing or music therapies may allow people with autism to communicate in a manner more comfortable for them than speech.[44]

Schizophrenia

A 2005 systematic review of art therapy as an add on treatment for schizophrenia found unclear effects.[45] Group art therapy has been shown to improve some symptoms of schizophrenia. While studies concluded that art therapy did not improve Clinical Global Impression or Global Assessment of Functioning, they showed that the use of haptic art materials to express one's emotions, cognitions, and perceptions in a group setting lowered depressing themes and may improve self-esteem, enforce creativity, and facilitate the integrative therapeutic process for people with schizophrenia.[46] Studies reveal that cognitive behavioral therapy has proven to be most effective for this disorder.[27]

Geriatric patients

Studies conducted by Regev reveal that geriatric art therapy has been significantly useful in helping depression for the elderly, although not particularly successful among dementia patients.[27] Group therapy versus individual sessions proved to be more effective.

Trauma and children

Art therapy may alleviate trauma-induced emotions, such as shame and anger.[47] It is also likely to increase trauma survivors' sense of empowerment [48] and control by encouraging children to make choices in their artwork.[47] Art therapy in addition to psychotherapy offered more reduction in trauma symptoms than just psychotherapy alone.[49]

Because traumatic memories are encoded visually,[50][51] creating art may be the most effective way to access them. Through art therapy, children may be able to make more sense of their traumatic experiences and form accurate trauma narratives. Gradual exposure to these narratives may reduce trauma-induced symptoms, such as flashbacks and nightmares.[47] Repetition of directives reduces anxiety, and visually creating narratives helps clients build coping skills and balanced nervous system responses.[52] This only works in long-term art therapy interventions.[27]

Children who have experienced trauma may benefit from group art therapy. The group format is effective in helping survivors develop relationships with others who have experienced similar situations.[48] Group art therapy may also be beneficial in helping children with trauma regain trust and social self-esteem.[47] Usually, participants who undergo art therapy through group interventions have positive experiences and give their internal feelings validation.[53]

Veterans and post-traumatic stress disorder

Art therapy has an established history of being used to treat veterans, with the American Art Therapy Association documenting its use as early as 1945.[54] As with other sources of trauma, combat veterans may benefit from art therapy to access memories and to engage with treatment. A 2016 randomized control trial found that art therapy in conjunction with cognitive processing therapy (CPT) was more beneficial than CPT alone.[55] Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the National Intrepid Center of Excellence and other Veteran Association institutions use art therapy to help veterans with PTSD.[56]

Bereavement

A number of therapists use art therapy to assist those who have recently experienced the death of a loved one.[additional citation(s) needed] This is proposed to be particularly beneficial where clients find it difficult to verbalize their feelings of loss and shock, and so may use creative means to express their feelings.[57] For example, it has been used to enable children to express their feelings of loss where they may lack the maturity to verbalize their bereavement.

Eating disorders

Art therapy may help people with anorexia with weight improvements and may help with depression level.[58] Traumatic or negative childhood experiences can result in unintentionally harmful coping mechanisms, such as eating disorders. As a result, clients may be cut off from their emotions, self-rejecting, and detached from their strengths.[59] Art therapy may provide an outlet for exploring these inaccessible strengths and emotions; this is important because persons with eating disorders may not know how to vocalize their emotions.[59]

Art therapy may be beneficial for clients with eating disorders because clients can create visual representations with art material of progress made, represent alterations to the body, and provide a nonthreatening method of acting out impulses.[59] Individuals with eating disorders tend to rely heavily on defense mechanisms to feel a sense of control; it is important that clients feel a sense of authority over their art products through freedom of expression and controllable art materials.[59] Through controllable media, such as pencils, markers, and colored pencils, along with freedom of choice with the media, clients with eating disorders can create boundaries around unsettling themes.[60]

Another systematic literature review found conclusive evidence that art therapy resulted in significant weight loss in patients with obesity, as well as helping with a range of psychological symptoms.[27]

Ongoing daily challenges

Those who do not have a mental illness or physical disease were also tested; these patients have ongoing daily challenges such as high-intensity jobs, financial constraints, and other personal issues. Findings revealed that art therapy reduces levels of stress and burnout related to patients' professions.[27]

Containment

The term containment, within art therapy and other therapeutic settings, has been used to describe what the client can experience within the safety and privacy of a trusting relationship between client and counselor.[61][62] This term has also been equated, within art therapy research, with the holding or confining of an issue within the boundaries of visual expression, like a border or the circumference of a mandala.[63] The creation of mandalas for symptom regulation is not a new approach within the field of art therapy, and numerous studies have been conducted in order to assess their efficacy.[64][65]

Purpose

 
Art media commonly used in art therapy

The purpose of art therapy is essentially one of healing. This type of healing is used to cope with the symptoms that can happen after being diagnosed with cancer, or mental or physical disorder to reduce the suffering of the person.[24] Art therapy does not only help with coping with trauma but helps to find other important information about people.[24] Art therapy can be successfully applied to clients with physical, mental or emotional problems, diseases and disorders. Any type of visual art and art medium can be employed within the therapeutic process, including painting, drawing, sculpting, photography, and digital art.[66] Art therapy may include creative exercises such as drawing or painting a certain emotion, creative journaling, or freestyle creation.[67]

One proposed learning mechanism is through the increased excitation, and as a consequence, strengthening of neuronal connections.[68]

A typical session

 
A man draws in response to an art therapy directive.

Art therapy can take place in a variety of different settings. Art therapists may vary the goals of art therapy and the way they provide art therapy, depending upon the institution's or client's needs. After an assessment of the client's strengths and needs, art therapy may be offered in either an individual or group format, according to which is better suited to the person. Art therapist Dr. Ellen G. Horovitz wrote, "My responsibilities vary from job to job. It is wholly different when one works as a consultant or in an agency as opposed to private practice. In private practice, it becomes more complex and far reaching. If you are the primary therapist then your responsibilities can swing from the spectrum of social work to the primary care of the patient. This includes dovetailing with physicians, judges, family members, and sometimes even community members that might be important in the caretaking of the individual."[69]

Like other psychotherapists in private practice, some art therapists find it important to ensure, for the therapeutic relationship, that the sessions occur each week in the same space and at the same time.[70]

Art therapy is often offered in schools as a form of therapy for children because of their creativity and interest in art as a means of expression. Art therapy can benefit children with a variety of issues, such as learning disabilities, speech and language disorders, behavioral disorders, and other emotional disturbances that might be hindering a child's learning.[medical citation needed] Similar to other psychologists that work in schools, art therapists should be able to diagnose the problems facing their student clients, and individualize treatment and interventions. Art therapists work closely with teachers and parents in order to implement their therapy strategies.[medical citation needed]

Art-based assessments

Art therapists and other professionals use art-based assessments to evaluate emotional, cognitive, and developmental conditions. There are also many psychological assessments that utilize artmaking to analyze various types of mental functioning (Betts, 2005). Art therapists and other professionals are educated to administer and interpret these assessments, most of which rely on simple directives and a standardized array of art materials (Malchiodi 1998, 2003; Betts, 2005).[71][full citation needed] The first drawing assessment for psychological purposes was created in 1906 by German psychiatrist Fritz Mohr (Malchiodi 1998).[71] In 1926, researcher Florence Goodenough created a drawing test to measure the intelligence in children called the Draw-A-Man Test (Malchiodi 1998).[71] The key to interpreting the Draw-A-Man Test was that the more details a child incorporated into the drawing, the more intelligent they were (Malchiodi, 1998).[71] Goodenough and other researchers realized the test had just as much to do with personality as it did intelligence (Malchiodi, 1998).[71] Several other psychiatric art assessments were created in the 1940s, and have been used ever since (Malchiodi 1998).[71]

Notwithstanding, many art therapists eschew diagnostic testing and indeed some writers (Hogan 1997) question the validity of therapists making interpretative assumptions. More recent literature, however, highlights the utility of standardized approaches to treatment planning and clinical decision-making, such as is evidenced through this source. Below are some examples of art therapy assessments:

Mandala Assessment Research Instrument

In this assessment, a person is asked to select a card from a deck with different mandalas (designs enclosed in a geometric shape) and then must choose a color from a set of colored cards. The person is then asked to draw the mandala from the card they choose with an oil pastel of the color of their choice. The artist is then asked to explain if there were any meanings, experiences, or related information related to the mandala they drew. This test is based on the beliefs of Joan Kellogg, who sees a recurring correlation between the images, pattern and shapes in the mandalas that people draw and the personalities of the artists. This test assesses and gives clues to a person's psychological progressions and their current psychological condition (Malchiodi 1998). The mandala originates in Buddhism; its connections with spirituality help us to see links with transpersonal art.

House–Tree–Person

 
Four-year-old's drawing of a person

In the house-tree-person test, the client is asked to make a drawing that includes a house, a tree and a person, after which the therapist asks several questions about each. For example, with reference to the house, Buck (1984) wrote questions such as, "Is it a happy house?" and "What is the house made of?" Regarding the tree, questions include, "About how old is that tree?" and "Is the tree alive?" Concerning the person, questions include, "Is that person happy?" and "How does that person feel?"

The house-tree-person test is a projective personality test, a type of exam in which the test taker responds to or provides ambiguous, abstract, or unstructured stimuli (often in the form of pictures or drawings). It is to measure aspects of a person's personality through interpretation of drawings and responses to questions, self-perceptions and attitudes.[72]

Outsider art

The relation between the fields of art therapy and outsider art has been widely debated. The term art brut was first coined by French artist Jean Dubuffet to describe "art created outside the boundaries of official culture". Dubuffet used the term art brut to focus on artistic practice by insane-asylum patients. The English translation "outsider art" was first used by art critic Roger Cardinal in 1972.[73][74]

Both terms have been criticized because of their social and personal impact on both patients and artists. Art therapy professionals have been accused of not putting enough emphasis on the artistic value and meaning of the artist's works, considering them only from a medical perspective. This led to the misconception of the whole outsider art practice, while addressing therapeutical issues within the field of aesthetical discussion. Outsider art, on the contrary, has been negatively judged because of the labeling of the artists' work, i.e. the equation artist = genius = insane. Moreover, the business-related issues on the term outsider art carry some misunderstandings.[75][76] While the outsider artist is part of a specific art system, which can add a positive value to both the artist's work as well as his personal development, it can also imprison him within the boundaries of the system itself.[77][78]

See also

References

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[1]

External links

  •   Media related to Art therapy at Wikimedia Commons
  1. ^ Wang, Qiu-Yue; Li, Dong-Mei (2016-09-01). "Advances in art therapy for patients with dementia". Chinese Nursing Research. 3 (3): 105–108. doi:10.1016/j.cnre.2016.06.011. ISSN 2095-7718.

therapy, confused, with, arts, therapy, which, includes, other, creative, therapies, such, drama, therapy, music, therapy, distinct, discipline, that, incorporates, creative, methods, expression, through, visual, media, creative, arts, therapy, profession, ori. Art therapy not to be confused with arts therapy which includes other creative therapies such as drama therapy and music therapy is a distinct discipline that incorporates creative methods of expression through visual art media Art therapy as a creative arts therapy profession originated in the fields of art and psychotherapy and may vary in definition Art therapyTwo convict artists draw designs of carpets on graph paper at Industrial Workshops of Central Jail Faisalabad Faisalabad Pakistan in 2010MeSHD001155 edit on Wikidata Edited by Samar Jammoul There are three main ways that art therapy is employed The first one is called analytic art therapy Analytic art therapy is based on the theories that come from analytical psychology and in more cases psychoanalysis 1 Analytic art therapy focuses on the client the therapist and the ideas that are transferred between the both of them through art 1 Another way that art therapy is utilized is art psychotherapy This approach focuses more on the psychotherapist and their analysis of their clients artwork verbally 1 The last way art therapy is looked at is through the lens of art as therapy Some art therapists practicing art as therapy believe that analyzing the client s artwork verbally is not essential therefore they stress the creation process of the art instead 1 In all of these different approaches to art therapy the art therapist s client goes on the journey to delve into their inner thoughts and emotions by the use of paint paper and pen clay sand fabric or other media 1 Art therapy can be used to help people improve cognitive and sensory motor function self esteem self awareness and emotional resilience 2 It may also aide in resolving conflicts and reduce distress Current art therapy includes a vast number of other approaches such as person centered cognitive behavior Gestalt narrative Adlerian and family The tenets of art therapy involve humanism creativity reconciling emotional conflicts fostering self awareness and personal growth 3 Contents 1 History 2 Definitions 3 Uses 3 1 General illness 3 2 Subjective cancer symptoms 3 3 Disaster relief 3 4 Dementia 3 5 Autism 3 6 Schizophrenia 3 7 Geriatric patients 3 8 Trauma and children 3 9 Bereavement 3 10 Eating disorders 3 11 Ongoing daily challenges 3 12 Containment 4 Purpose 5 A typical session 6 Art based assessments 6 1 Mandala Assessment Research Instrument 6 2 House Tree Person 7 Outsider art 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditIn the history of mental health treatment art therapy combining studies of psychology and art emerged much later as a new field This type of unconventional therapy is used to cultivate self esteem and awareness improve cognitive and motor abilities resolve conflicts or stress and inspire resilience in patients 2 It invites sensory kinesthetic perceptual and sensory symbolization to address issues that verbal psychotherapy cannot reach 2 Although art therapy is a relatively young therapeutic discipline its roots lie in the use of the arts in the moral treatment of psychiatric patients in the late 18th century 4 Art therapy as a profession began in the mid 20th century arising independently in English speaking and European countries Art had been used at the time for various reasons communication inducing creativity in children and in religious contexts 1 The early art therapists who published accounts of their work acknowledged the influence of aesthetics psychiatry psychoanalysis rehabilitation early childhood education and art education to varying degrees on their practices 4 The British artist Adrian Hill coined the term art therapy in 1942 5 Hill recovering from tuberculosis in a sanatorium discovered the therapeutic benefits of drawing and painting while convalescing He wrote that the value of art therapy lay in completely engrossing the mind as well as the fingers releasing the creative energy of the frequently inhibited patient which enabled the patient to build up a strong defence against his misfortunes He suggested artistic work to his fellow patients That began his art therapy work which was documented in 1945 in his book Art Versus Illness 6 Edward Adamson the father of art therapy in Britain 7 The artist Edward Adamson demobilised after WW2 joined Adrian Hill to extend Hill s work to the British long stay mental hospitals Other early proponents of art therapy in Britain include E M Lyddiatt Michael Edwards Diana Raphael Halliday and Rita Simons The British Association of Art Therapists was founded in 1964 8 U S art therapy pioneers Margaret Naumburg and Edith Kramer began practicing at around the same time as Hill Naumburg an educator asserted that art therapy is psychoanalytically oriented and that free art expression becomes a form of symbolic speech which leads to an increase in verbalization in the course of therapy 9 Edith Kramer an artist pointed out the importance of the creative process psychological defenses and artistic quality writing that sublimation is attained when forms are created that successfully contain anger anxiety or pain 10 Other early proponents of art therapy in the United States include Elinor Ulman Robert Bob Ault and Judith Rubin The American Art Therapy Association was founded in 1969 11 National professional associations of art therapy exist in many countries including Brazil Canada Finland Lebanon Israel Japan the Netherlands Romania South Korea and Sweden International networking contributes to the establishment of standards for education and practice 12 Art Therapist process work Diverse perspectives exist on history of art therapy which complement those that focus on the institutionalization of art therapy as a profession in Britain and the United States 13 14 15 Definitions Edit An art therapist watches over a person with mental health problems during an art therapy workshop in Senegal There are various definitions of the term art therapy 16 1 The British Association of Art Therapists defines art therapy as a form of psychotherapy that uses art media as its primary mode of expression and communication They also add that clients who are referred to an art therapist need not have previous experience in art the art therapist is not primarily concerned with making an aesthetic or diagnostic assessment of the client s image 17 18 The American Art Therapy Association defines art therapy as an integrative mental health and human services profession that enriches the lives of individuals families and communities through active art making creative p 19 rocess applied psychological theory and human experience within a psychotherapeutic relationship 20 Uses EditAs a regulated mental health profession art therapy is employed in many clinical and other settings with diverse populations It is increasingly recognized as a valid form of therapy Art therapy can also be found in non clinical settings as well as in art studios and in creativity development workshops Licensing for art therapists can vary from state to state with some recognizing art therapy as a separate license and some licensing under a related field such a professional counseling or mental health counseling 21 Art therapists must have a master s degree that includes training in the creative process psychological development and group therapy and they must complete a clinical internship 22 Art therapists may also pursue additional credentialing through the Art Therapy Credentials Board 23 Art therapists work with populations of all ages and with a wide variety of disorders and diseases Art therapists provide services to children adolescents and adults whether as individuals couples families or groups Using their evaluative and psychotherapy skills art therapists choose materials and interventions appropriate to their clients needs and design sessions to achieve therapeutic goals and objectives Other ways that therapists may choose to use art therapy with their clients include types of art like drawing self portraits closing their eyes while drawing spiral drawing and lastly drawing their emotions 24 They use the creative process to help their clients increase insight cope with stress work through traumatic experiences increase cognitive memory and neurosensory abilities improve interpersonal relationships and achieve greater self fulfillment The activities an art therapist chooses to do with clients depend on a variety of factors such as their mental state or age Art therapists may draw upon images from resources such as the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism to incorporate historical art and symbols into their work with patients Depending on the state province or country the term art therapist may be reserved for those who are professionals trained in both art and therapy and hold a master or doctoral degree in art therapy or certification in art therapy obtained after a graduate degree in a related field 25 Other professionals such as mental health counselors social workers psychologists and play therapists optionally combine art making with basic psychotherapeutic modalities in their treatment Therapists may better understand a client s absorption of information after assessing elements of their artwork 26 A systemic literature review compiled and evaluated different research studies some of which are listed below Overall this survey publication revealed that both the high level of variability such as incorporating talk therapy and limited number of studies done with certified art therapists made it difficult to generalize over findings Despite these limitations art therapy has to an extent proved its efficacy in relieving symptoms and improving quality of life 27 General illness Edit Art making is a common activity used by many people to cope with illness Art and the creative process can alleviate many illnesses cancer heart disease influenza etc This form of therapy helps benefit those with mental illnesses as well chronic depression anxiety disorders bipolar disorders etc It is difficult to measure the efficacy of art therapy as it treats various mental illnesses to different degrees although people can escape the emotional effects of various illness through art making and many creative methods 28 Sometimes people cannot express the way they feel as it can be difficult to put into words and art can help people express their experiences During art therapy people can explore past present and future experiences using art as a form of coping 28 Art can be a refuge for the intense emotions associated with illness there are no limits to the imagination in finding creative ways to express emotions Hospitals have started studying the influence of arts on patient care and found that participants in art programs have better vitals and less difficulty sleeping Artistic influence does not need to be participation in a program but studies have found that a landscape picture in a hospital room had reduced need for narcotic pain killers and less time in recovery at the hospital 28 In addition either looking at or creating art in hospitals helped stabilize vital signs speed up the healing process and in general bring a sense of hope and soul to the patient Family care workers doctors and nurses are also positively affected Using art therapy it can also be a good way for those with general illnesses to express their feelings and emotions through art when it may or may not be difficult to explain their feelings through words Art helps give security to emotions to those if they are not comfortable sharing their emotions to others but can trust a canvas or sheet of paper to hold onto those emotions Subjective cancer symptoms Edit Many studies have been conducted on the benefits of art therapy on cancer patients Art therapy has been found useful for supporting patients during the stress of such things as chemotherapy treatment 29 Art therapists have conducted studies to understand why some cancer patients turn to art making as a coping mechanism and a tool to creating a positive identity outside of being a cancer patient Women in the study participated in different art programs ranging from pottery and card making to drawing and painting The programs helped them regain an identity outside of having cancer lessened emotional pain from their ongoing fight with cancer and also gave them hope for the future In a study involving women facing cancer related difficulties such as fear pain altered social relationships it was found that Engaging in different types of visual art textiles card making collage pottery watercolor acrylics helped these women in 4 major ways First it helped them focus on positive life experiences relieving their ongoing preoccupation with cancer Second it enhanced their self worth and identity by providing them with opportunities to demonstrate continuity challenge and achievement Third it enabled them to maintain a social identity that resisted being defined by cancer Finally it allowed them to express their feelings in a symbolic manner especially during chemotherapy 28 Another study showed those who participated in these types of activities were discharged earlier than those who did not participate 28 Furthermore another study revealed the healing effects of art therapy on female breast cancer patients Studies revealed that relatively short term art therapy interventions significantly improved patients emotional states and perceived symptoms 27 Studies have also shown how the emotional distress of cancer patients has been reduced when utilizing the creative process The women made drawings of themselves throughout the treatment process while also doing yoga and meditating these actions combined helped to alleviate some symptoms 28 Another study with 111 participants looked at the efficacy of mindfulness based art therapy combining meditation with art 30 The study used measurements such as quality of life physical symptoms depression and anxiety to evaluate the efficacy of the intervention This yielded positive results that there was a significant decrease in distress and significant improvement in quality of life A review of 12 studies investigating the use of art therapy in cancer patients by Wood Molassiotis and Payne 2010 investigated the symptoms of emotional social physical and global functioning and spiritual concerns of cancer patients They found that art therapy can improve the process of psychological readjustment to the change loss and uncertainty associated with surviving cancer It was also suggested that art therapy can provide a sense of meaning making through the physical act of creating the art When given five individual sessions of art therapy once per week art therapy was shown to be useful for personal empowerment by helping the cancer patients understand their own boundaries in relation to the needs of other people In turn those who had art therapy treatment felt more connected to others and found social interaction more enjoyable than individuals who did not receive art therapy treatment Furthermore art therapy improved motivation levels ability to discuss emotional and physical health general well being and increased global quality of life in cancer patients 31 In sum relatively short term intervention of art therapy that is individualized to patients has the potential to significantly improve emotional state and quality of life while reducing perceived symptoms relating to the cancer diagnosis 27 Disaster relief Edit Art therapy has been used in a variety of traumatic experiences including disaster relief and crisis intervention Art therapists have worked with children adolescents and adults after natural and manmade disasters https us jkp com products art therapy in response to natural disasters mass violence and crises them to make art in response to their experiences Some suggested strategies for working with victims of disaster include assessing for distress or post traumatic stress disorder PTSD 32 normalizing feelings modeling coping skills promoting relaxation skills establishing a social support network and increasing a sense of security and stability 33 137ff 34 120ff Dementia Edit Although art therapy seems to help patients with dementia citation needed a recent systematic review did not find consistent support 35 It is important that the art tools are easy to use and relatively simple to understand since mobility can also be a problem 36 Although art therapy helps with behavioral issues it does not appear to affect worsening mental abilities 37 Tentative evidence supports benefits with respect to quality of life 38 Art therapy had no clear results on affecting memory or emotional well being scales 39 However Alzheimer s Association states that art and music can enrich people s lives and allow for self expression 40 D W Zaidel a researcher and therapist at VAGA claims that engagement with art can stimulate specific areas of the brain involved in language processing and visuo spatial perception two cognitive functions which decline significant in dementia patients 41 Autism Edit Art therapy is increasingly recognized to help address challenges of people with autism 3 Art therapy may address core symptoms of autism spectrum disorders by promoting sensory regulation supporting psychomotor development and facilitating communication 42 Art therapy is also thought to promote emotional and mental growth by allowing self expression visual communication and creativity 43 Most importantly studies have found that painting drawing or music therapies may allow people with autism to communicate in a manner more comfortable for them than speech 44 Schizophrenia Edit A 2005 systematic review of art therapy as an add on treatment for schizophrenia found unclear effects 45 Group art therapy has been shown to improve some symptoms of schizophrenia While studies concluded that art therapy did not improve Clinical Global Impression or Global Assessment of Functioning they showed that the use of haptic art materials to express one s emotions cognitions and perceptions in a group setting lowered depressing themes and may improve self esteem enforce creativity and facilitate the integrative therapeutic process for people with schizophrenia 46 Studies reveal that cognitive behavioral therapy has proven to be most effective for this disorder 27 Geriatric patients Edit Studies conducted by Regev reveal that geriatric art therapy has been significantly useful in helping depression for the elderly although not particularly successful among dementia patients 27 Group therapy versus individual sessions proved to be more effective Trauma and children Edit Art therapy may alleviate trauma induced emotions such as shame and anger 47 It is also likely to increase trauma survivors sense of empowerment 48 and control by encouraging children to make choices in their artwork 47 Art therapy in addition to psychotherapy offered more reduction in trauma symptoms than just psychotherapy alone 49 Because traumatic memories are encoded visually 50 51 creating art may be the most effective way to access them Through art therapy children may be able to make more sense of their traumatic experiences and form accurate trauma narratives Gradual exposure to these narratives may reduce trauma induced symptoms such as flashbacks and nightmares 47 Repetition of directives reduces anxiety and visually creating narratives helps clients build coping skills and balanced nervous system responses 52 This only works in long term art therapy interventions 27 Children who have experienced trauma may benefit from group art therapy The group format is effective in helping survivors develop relationships with others who have experienced similar situations 48 Group art therapy may also be beneficial in helping children with trauma regain trust and social self esteem 47 Usually participants who undergo art therapy through group interventions have positive experiences and give their internal feelings validation 53 Veterans and post traumatic stress disorderArt therapy has an established history of being used to treat veterans with the American Art Therapy Association documenting its use as early as 1945 54 As with other sources of trauma combat veterans may benefit from art therapy to access memories and to engage with treatment A 2016 randomized control trial found that art therapy in conjunction with cognitive processing therapy CPT was more beneficial than CPT alone 55 Walter Reed Army Medical Center the National Intrepid Center of Excellence and other Veteran Association institutions use art therapy to help veterans with PTSD 56 Bereavement Edit A number of therapists use art therapy to assist those who have recently experienced the death of a loved one additional citation s needed This is proposed to be particularly beneficial where clients find it difficult to verbalize their feelings of loss and shock and so may use creative means to express their feelings 57 For example it has been used to enable children to express their feelings of loss where they may lack the maturity to verbalize their bereavement Eating disorders Edit Art therapy may help people with anorexia with weight improvements and may help with depression level 58 Traumatic or negative childhood experiences can result in unintentionally harmful coping mechanisms such as eating disorders As a result clients may be cut off from their emotions self rejecting and detached from their strengths 59 Art therapy may provide an outlet for exploring these inaccessible strengths and emotions this is important because persons with eating disorders may not know how to vocalize their emotions 59 Art therapy may be beneficial for clients with eating disorders because clients can create visual representations with art material of progress made represent alterations to the body and provide a nonthreatening method of acting out impulses 59 Individuals with eating disorders tend to rely heavily on defense mechanisms to feel a sense of control it is important that clients feel a sense of authority over their art products through freedom of expression and controllable art materials 59 Through controllable media such as pencils markers and colored pencils along with freedom of choice with the media clients with eating disorders can create boundaries around unsettling themes 60 Another systematic literature review found conclusive evidence that art therapy resulted in significant weight loss in patients with obesity as well as helping with a range of psychological symptoms 27 Ongoing daily challenges Edit Those who do not have a mental illness or physical disease were also tested these patients have ongoing daily challenges such as high intensity jobs financial constraints and other personal issues Findings revealed that art therapy reduces levels of stress and burnout related to patients professions 27 Containment Edit The term containment within art therapy and other therapeutic settings has been used to describe what the client can experience within the safety and privacy of a trusting relationship between client and counselor 61 62 This term has also been equated within art therapy research with the holding or confining of an issue within the boundaries of visual expression like a border or the circumference of a mandala 63 The creation of mandalas for symptom regulation is not a new approach within the field of art therapy and numerous studies have been conducted in order to assess their efficacy 64 65 Purpose Edit Art media commonly used in art therapy The purpose of art therapy is essentially one of healing This type of healing is used to cope with the symptoms that can happen after being diagnosed with cancer or mental or physical disorder to reduce the suffering of the person 24 Art therapy does not only help with coping with trauma but helps to find other important information about people 24 Art therapy can be successfully applied to clients with physical mental or emotional problems diseases and disorders Any type of visual art and art medium can be employed within the therapeutic process including painting drawing sculpting photography and digital art 66 Art therapy may include creative exercises such as drawing or painting a certain emotion creative journaling or freestyle creation 67 One proposed learning mechanism is through the increased excitation and as a consequence strengthening of neuronal connections 68 A typical session Edit A man draws in response to an art therapy directive Art therapy can take place in a variety of different settings Art therapists may vary the goals of art therapy and the way they provide art therapy depending upon the institution s or client s needs After an assessment of the client s strengths and needs art therapy may be offered in either an individual or group format according to which is better suited to the person Art therapist Dr Ellen G Horovitz wrote My responsibilities vary from job to job It is wholly different when one works as a consultant or in an agency as opposed to private practice In private practice it becomes more complex and far reaching If you are the primary therapist then your responsibilities can swing from the spectrum of social work to the primary care of the patient This includes dovetailing with physicians judges family members and sometimes even community members that might be important in the caretaking of the individual 69 Like other psychotherapists in private practice some art therapists find it important to ensure for the therapeutic relationship that the sessions occur each week in the same space and at the same time 70 Art therapy is often offered in schools as a form of therapy for children because of their creativity and interest in art as a means of expression Art therapy can benefit children with a variety of issues such as learning disabilities speech and language disorders behavioral disorders and other emotional disturbances that might be hindering a child s learning medical citation needed Similar to other psychologists that work in schools art therapists should be able to diagnose the problems facing their student clients and individualize treatment and interventions Art therapists work closely with teachers and parents in order to implement their therapy strategies medical citation needed Art based assessments EditArt therapists and other professionals use art based assessments to evaluate emotional cognitive and developmental conditions There are also many psychological assessments that utilize artmaking to analyze various types of mental functioning Betts 2005 Art therapists and other professionals are educated to administer and interpret these assessments most of which rely on simple directives and a standardized array of art materials Malchiodi 1998 2003 Betts 2005 71 full citation needed The first drawing assessment for psychological purposes was created in 1906 by German psychiatrist Fritz Mohr Malchiodi 1998 71 In 1926 researcher Florence Goodenough created a drawing test to measure the intelligence in children called the Draw A Man Test Malchiodi 1998 71 The key to interpreting the Draw A Man Test was that the more details a child incorporated into the drawing the more intelligent they were Malchiodi 1998 71 Goodenough and other researchers realized the test had just as much to do with personality as it did intelligence Malchiodi 1998 71 Several other psychiatric art assessments were created in the 1940s and have been used ever since Malchiodi 1998 71 Notwithstanding many art therapists eschew diagnostic testing and indeed some writers Hogan 1997 question the validity of therapists making interpretative assumptions More recent literature however highlights the utility of standardized approaches to treatment planning and clinical decision making such as is evidenced through this source Below are some examples of art therapy assessments Mandala Assessment Research Instrument Edit In this assessment a person is asked to select a card from a deck with different mandalas designs enclosed in a geometric shape and then must choose a color from a set of colored cards The person is then asked to draw the mandala from the card they choose with an oil pastel of the color of their choice The artist is then asked to explain if there were any meanings experiences or related information related to the mandala they drew This test is based on the beliefs of Joan Kellogg who sees a recurring correlation between the images pattern and shapes in the mandalas that people draw and the personalities of the artists This test assesses and gives clues to a person s psychological progressions and their current psychological condition Malchiodi 1998 The mandala originates in Buddhism its connections with spirituality help us to see links with transpersonal art House Tree Person Edit Four year old s drawing of a person In the house tree person test the client is asked to make a drawing that includes a house a tree and a person after which the therapist asks several questions about each For example with reference to the house Buck 1984 wrote questions such as Is it a happy house and What is the house made of Regarding the tree questions include About how old is that tree and Is the tree alive Concerning the person questions include Is that person happy and How does that person feel The house tree person test is a projective personality test a type of exam in which the test taker responds to or provides ambiguous abstract or unstructured stimuli often in the form of pictures or drawings It is to measure aspects of a person s personality through interpretation of drawings and responses to questions self perceptions and attitudes 72 Outsider art EditMain article Outsider art The relation between the fields of art therapy and outsider art has been widely debated The term art brut was first coined by French artist Jean Dubuffet to describe art created outside the boundaries of official culture Dubuffet used the term art brut to focus on artistic practice by insane asylum patients The English translation outsider art was first used by art critic Roger Cardinal in 1972 73 74 Both terms have been criticized because of their social and personal impact on both patients and artists Art therapy professionals have been accused of not putting enough emphasis on the artistic value and meaning of the artist s works considering them only from a medical perspective This led to the misconception of the whole outsider art practice while addressing therapeutical issues within the field of aesthetical discussion Outsider art on the contrary has been negatively judged because of the labeling of the artists work i e the equation artist genius insane Moreover the business related issues on the term outsider art carry some misunderstandings 75 76 While the outsider artist is part of a specific art system which can add a positive value to both the artist s work as well as his personal development it can also imprison him within the boundaries of the system itself 77 78 See also Edit Visual arts portalArtistic freedom Bibliotherapy Comic book therapy Expressive therapy List of psychotherapies List of therapiesReferences Edit a b c d e f Hogan Susan 2001 Healing Arts The History of Art Therapy United Kingdom Jessica Kingsley Publishers London and Philadelphia pp 21 22 ISBN 1 85302 799 5 a b c About Art Therapy American Art Therapy Association Retrieved 2020 04 12 a b Wadeson H Durkin J amp Perach D 1989 Advances in art therapy New York John Wiley amp Sons a b Directory Therapist 2017 04 16 Art Therapy Therapist Directory Retrieved 2020 04 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Hogan S 2001 Healing arts The history of art therapy London Jessica Kingsley p 135 Hill A 1945 Art versus illness A story of art therapy London George Allen and Unwin Walker J 1992 Glossary of Art Architecture amp Design since 1945 3rd ed London Library Association Publishing Waller D 1991 Becoming a profession A history of art therapy 1940 82 London Routledge Naumburg M 1953 Psychoneurotic art Its function in psychotherapy New York Grune amp Stratton p 3 Kramer E 1971 Art as therapy with children New York Schocken Books p 219 Junge M 2010 The modern history of art therapy in the United States Springfield IL Charles C Thomas ISBN 978 0 398 07940 6 Coulter Smith A August 1990 International Networking Group of Art Therapists Newsletter No 1 Potash J S Ramirez W A 2013 Broadening history expanding possibilities Contributions of Wayne Ramirez to art therapy Art Therapy 30 4 169 176 doi 10 1080 07421656 2014 847084 S2CID 145761884 Kalmanowitz D Lloyd B 1999 Fragments of art at work Art therapy in the former Yugoslavia The Arts in Psychotherapy 26 1 15 25 doi 10 1016 s0197 4556 98 00027 6 Boston C G 2005 Life story of an art therapist of color Art Therapy 22 4 189 192 doi 10 1080 07421656 2005 10129519 S2CID 145467423 Edwards David 2004 Art therapy London SAGE ISBN 978 0761947509 About Art Therapy British Association of Art Therapists Retrieved 3 January 2018 Edwards David 1 January 2014 Art Therapy SAGE ISBN 978 1 4462 9748 3 Google Books books google com Retrieved 2022 02 04 About Art Therapy American Art Therapy Association Retrieved 30 April 2020 State Advocacy American Art Therapy Association Retrieved 2020 04 30 Becoming an Art Therapist American Art Therapy Association Retrieved 2020 04 30 Credentials and Licensure American Art Therapy Association Retrieved 2020 04 30 a b c Hu Jingxuan Zhang Jinhuan Hu Liyu Yu Haibo Xu Jinping 2021 Art Therapy A Complementary Treatment for Mental Disorders Frontiers in Psychology 12 686005 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2021 686005 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 8397377 PMID 34456801 Becoming an Art Therapist American Art Therapy Association Retrieved 2021 03 31 Lusebrink Vija B 2010 Assessment and Therapeutic Application of the Expressive Therapies Continuum Implications for Brain Structures and Functions PDF Art Therapy Journal of the American Art Therapy Association 27 4 168 177 doi 10 1080 07421656 2010 10129380 S2CID 6758378 a b c d e f g h Regev Dafna Cohen Yatziv Liat 2018 08 29 Effectiveness of Art Therapy With Adult Clients in 2018 What Progress Has Been Made Frontiers in Psychology 9 1531 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2018 01531 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 6124538 PMID 30210388 a b c d e f Stuckey HL Nobel J February 2010 The connection between art healing and public health a review of current literature American Journal of Public Health 100 2 254 63 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2008 156497 PMC 2804629 PMID 20019311 Forzoni Silvia Perez Michela Martignetti Angelo Crispino Sergio March 2010 Art therapy with cancer patients during chemotherapy sessions an analysis of the patients perception of helpfulness Palliative amp Supportive Care 8 1 41 48 doi 10 1017 S1478951509990691 ISSN 1478 9523 PMID 20163759 S2CID 32428984 Monti Daniel A Peterson Caroline Kunkel Elisabeth J Shakin Hauck Walter W Pequignot Edward Rhodes Lora Brainard George C May 2006 A randomized controlled trial of mindfulness based art therapy MBAT for women with cancer Psycho Oncology 15 5 363 373 doi 10 1002 pon 988 ISSN 1057 9249 PMID 16288447 S2CID 15548338 Wood M J Molassiotis A Payne S 2011 What research evidence is there for the use of art therapy in the management of symptoms in adults with cancer A systematic review Psycho Oncology 20 2 135 145 doi 10 1002 pon 1722 PMID 20878827 S2CID 18675899 Post Traumatic Stress Disorder medlineplus gov Retrieved 2020 04 30 Malchiodi Cathy A 2008 The art therapy sourcebook 2nd ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0071468275 Wadeson Harriet 2010 Art psychotherapy 2nd ed Hoboken N J John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0470417003 Deshmukh Sunita R Holmes John Cardno Alastair 2018 09 13 Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group ed Art therapy for people with dementia Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2018 9 CD011073 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD011073 pub2 PMC 6513479 PMID 30215847 Wang Qiu Yue Li Dong Mei 2016 09 01 Advances in art therapy for patients with dementia Chinese Nursing Research 3 3 105 108 doi 10 1016 j cnre 2016 06 011 ISSN 2095 7718 Cowl Andrielle L Gaugler Joseph E 2014 10 02 Efficacy of Creative Arts Therapy in Treatment of Alzheimer s Disease and Dementia A Systematic Literature Review Activities Adaptation amp Aging 38 4 281 330 doi 10 1080 01924788 2014 966547 ISSN 0192 4788 S2CID 144965747 Chancellor B Duncan A Chatterjee A 2014 Art therapy for Alzheimer s disease and other dementias Journal of Alzheimer s Disease 39 1 1 11 doi 10 3233 JAD 131295 PMID 24121964 Deshmukh Sunita R Holmes John Cardno Alastair 13 September 2018 Art therapy for people with dementia The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2018 9 CD011073 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD011073 pub2 ISSN 1469 493X PMC 6513479 PMID 30215847 Alzheimer s Association 2020 Art and Music Alzheimer s Association Retrieved 30 April 2020 Zaidel Dahlia W 2015 Neuropsychology of Art Neurological Cognitive and Evolutionary Perspectives doi 10 4324 9781315719931 ISBN 9781317517450 Durrani Huma 2019 04 03 A Case for Art Therapy as a Treatment for Autism Spectrum Disorder Art Therapy 36 2 103 106 doi 10 1080 07421656 2019 1609326 ISSN 0742 1656 S2CID 181370829 The Impact of Art on Autism Autism Care Today 2017 10 22 Retrieved 2020 04 30 Jalambadani Zeinab 2020 Art therapy based on painting therapy on the improvement of autistic children s social interactions in Iran Indian Journal of Psychiatry 62 2 218 219 doi 10 4103 psychiatry IndianJPsychiatry 215 18 ISSN 0019 5545 PMC 7197842 PMID 32382187 Lloyd J Ruddy R Milnes D 2005 Art therapy for schizophrenia or schizophrenia like illnesses Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 4 4 CD003728 pub2 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD003728 pub2 PMID 16235338 GM Gajic 2013 Group art therapy as adjunct therapy for the treatment of schizophrenic patients in day hospital Vojnosanitetski Pregled PubMed gov 70 11 1065 1069 doi 10 2298 vsp1311065m PMID 24397206 a b c d Pifalo Terry January 2007 Jogging the Cogs Trauma Focused Art Therapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy with Sexually Abused Children Art Therapy 24 4 170 175 doi 10 1080 07421656 2007 10129471 ISSN 0742 1656 S2CID 42145148 a b Brooke Stephanie L January 1995 Art therapy An approach to working with sexual abuse survivors The Arts in Psychotherapy 22 5 447 466 doi 10 1016 0197 4556 95 00036 4 ISSN 0197 4556 Schouten Karin Alice de Niet Gerrit J Knipscheer Jeroen W Kleber Rolf J Hutschemaekers Giel J M April 2015 The Effectiveness of Art Therapy in the Treatment of Traumatized Adults A Systematic Review on Art Therapy and Trauma Trauma Violence amp Abuse 16 2 220 228 doi 10 1177 1524838014555032 ISSN 1524 8380 PMID 25403446 S2CID 19653241 Writer Mary PolsStaff 2017 11 19 A young survivor finds a refuge in Maine Press Herald Retrieved 2020 02 01 Pit bull attacked eight year old boy now 18 chicagotribune com Retrieved 2020 02 01 Hass Cohen Noah Findlay Joanna Clyde Carr Richard Vanderlan Jessica 2014 04 03 Check Change What You Need To Change and or Keep What You Want An Art Therapy Neurobiological Based Trauma Protocol Art Therapy 31 2 69 78 doi 10 1080 07421656 2014 903825 ISSN 0742 1656 S2CID 144163177 Cole Andrea Jenefsky Nadia Ben David Shelly Munson Michelle R 2018 Feeling Connected and Understood The Role of Creative Arts in Engaging Young Adults in Their Mental Health Services Social Work with Groups 41 1 2 6 20 doi 10 1080 01609513 2016 1258619 S2CID 151448815 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sornborger Jo Fann Alice Serpa J Greg Ventrelle Jennifer R D N M S Ming Foynes Melissa Carleton Megan Sherrill Andrew M Kao Lan K Jakubovic Rafaella Bui Eric October 2017 Integrative Therapy Approaches for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder A Special Focus on Treating Veterans Focus American Psychiatric Publishing 15 4 390 398 doi 10 1176 appi focus 20170026 ISSN 1541 4094 PMC 6519541 PMID 31975869 Campbell Melissa Decker Kathleen P Kruk Kerry Deaver Sarah P 2016 Art Therapy and Cognitive Processing Therapy for Combat Related PTSD A Randomized Controlled Trial Art Therapy Journal of the American Art Therapy Association 33 4 169 177 doi 10 1080 07421656 2016 1226643 ISSN 0742 1656 PMC 5764181 PMID 29332989 Art amp Healing PTSD The UnLonely Project 2015 07 02 Retrieved 2020 04 30 Trevor J Buser Juleen K Buser amp Samuel T Gladding 2005 Good Grief The Part of Arts in Healing Loss and Grief Journal of Creativity in Mental Health 1 3 4 173 183 Lock James Fitzpatrick Kathleen Kara Agras William S Weinbach Noam Jo Booil January 2018 Feasibility Study Combining Art Therapy or Cognitive Remediation Therapy with Family based Treatment for Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa European Eating Disorders Review 26 1 62 68 doi 10 1002 erv 2571 ISSN 1099 0968 PMC 5732028 PMID 29152825 a b c d Hinz Lisa 2006 Drawing from within Using art to treat eating disorders Jessica Kingsley Publishers ISBN 9781846425431 Thompson L 2001 Integration of art movement and verbal processing with women in an eating disorders program In S Riley Ed Group process made visible Group art therapy pp 209 220 Philadelphia PA Brunner Mazel Farrell Kirk R 2001 Secrets symbols synthesis and safety The role of boxes in art therapy American Journal of Art Therapy 39 3 88 92 Stace S 2014 Therapeutic doll making in art psychotherapy for complex trauma Art Therapy Journal of the American Art Therapy Association 31 1 12 20 doi 10 1080 07421656 2014 873689 S2CID 71227013 Chambala A 2008 Anxiety and art therapy Treatment in the public eye Art Therapy Journal of the American Art Therapy Association 25 4 187 189 doi 10 1080 07421656 2008 10129540 S2CID 142683904 Henderson P Rosen D Mascaro N 2007 Empirical study on the healing nature of mandalas Psychology of Aesthetics Creativity and the Arts 1 3 148 154 doi 10 1037 1931 3896 1 3 148 Martin L Oepen N Bauer K Nottensteiner A Mergheim K Gruber H Koch S 2018 Creative arts interventions for stress management and prevention A systematic review Behavioral Sciences 8 28 28 doi 10 3390 bs8020028 PMC 5836011 PMID 29470435 Thong Sairalyn Ansano 2007 Redefining the Tools of Art Therapy PDF Art Therapy Journal of the American Art Therapy Association 24 2 52 58 doi 10 1080 07421656 2007 10129583 S2CID 56181715 Foundation for Art and Healing 2011 Creative Exercises PDF The Foundation of Art and healing The Unlonely Project Retrieved 30 April 2020 Hass Cohen Noah Carr Richard 2008 Art Therapy and Clinical Neuroscience London and Philadelphia Jessica Kingsley Publishers pp 79 ISBN 978 1 84310 868 9 Directory of Art Schools amp Colleges ArtSchools com Archived from the original on 2017 07 05 Retrieved 2017 07 09 ACB FCC Certification Services for Wireless Equipment Archived from the original on 2010 06 03 Retrieved 2017 07 09 a b c d e f Machioldi C 1998 Understanding Children s Drawings Guildford Publications House Tree Person Test Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2021 04 03 Cardinal R 1972 Outsider Art London Tosatti B 2007 Les Fascicules de l Art brut un saggio sull artista Antonio dalla Valle Paragraphs on Outsider Art An essay on artist Antonio dalla Valle Baumann Daniel 2001 Art Brut Outsider art Denkfigur und Behauptung Art Brut Outsider Art Meanings and Shapes of thought Kunst Bulletin Geneva Navratil Leo 1996 Art Brut amp Psychiatry Raw Vision Geneva Bedoni Giorgio Tosatti Bianca 2000 Arte e psichiatria Uno sguardo sottile Art and psychiatry A thin look Mazzotta Milano Rexer Lyle 2005 How to Look at Outsider Art New York Abrams 1 External links Edit Media related to Art therapy at Wikimedia Commons Wang Qiu Yue Li Dong Mei 2016 09 01 Advances in art therapy for patients with dementia Chinese Nursing Research 3 3 105 108 doi 10 1016 j cnre 2016 06 011 ISSN 2095 7718 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Art therapy amp oldid 1139809954, 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