The Wiley Handbook of Art Therapy 2015
DOI: 10.1002/9781118306543.ch1
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History of Art Therapy

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Visual arts have long been utilized in community and healthcare spaces as therapeutic resources, places of resistance to the biomedical model, and forms of communication and community building ( 176 , 177 ). Visual art can take many forms—painting, drawing, handwork (e.g., pottery, sculpture, sewing, or basket weaving), movement, cinematography, photography, and acting.…”
Section: State-of-the-art In Pain Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Visual arts have long been utilized in community and healthcare spaces as therapeutic resources, places of resistance to the biomedical model, and forms of communication and community building ( 176 , 177 ). Visual art can take many forms—painting, drawing, handwork (e.g., pottery, sculpture, sewing, or basket weaving), movement, cinematography, photography, and acting.…”
Section: State-of-the-art In Pain Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Initially aligned as artists with psychiatrists (Junge, 2016), art therapists sought to differentiate themselves from activity, recreation, and occupational therapists in favor of aligning with counselors. Art therapists have typically sought uniqueness, yet as Phillips (2016) wrote, “even art does not make an art therapist unique” (p. 780).…”
Section: The Aata’s Values Conflictmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Offering a transdisciplinary vision for art therapists, she made the case for art therapists to embrace their uniqueness and enlarge their scope of practice from a primary focus on mental health to the “study of art’s influence on society, the mind, health, and behavior” (p. 163). Art therapists’ confusion in defining themselves, trapped in dichotomy (artist vs. therapist), contributes to an unrelenting disempowered minority voice in mental health that is underscored by their focus on survival, a theme that runs through the profession’s history (Junge, 2016; Phillips, 2016; Talwar, 2016).…”
Section: The Aata’s Values Conflictmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach allows the subject to benefit from the psychodynamic group. Art therapy emphasizes that (1) arts are the bridge between the inner and outer world, also the bridge between imagination and the reality; (2) art therapy absolutely does not appraise, instead it values individual's uniqueness; (3) experience not based on text is conveyed; when painting, the body's consciousness is awakened, which is a body feeling based on the inner knowledge and experience (Junge, 2015;Linesch, 2016;Kramer, 2001;Naumburg, 2001). …”
Section: Kandinsky's Work Concerning the Spiritual In Artmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The art therapy methods can be divided in two categories, which are psychotherapy (Naumburg, 1987) and creation (Kramer, 1993). Art therapist doesn't do the "painting analysis" but interpretation of art , and the key is that understanding of the subject's works requires oral expression, creative behavior and background data (Chiang, 2014;Junge, 2015;Kramer, 2001;Lu and Liu, 2008;Malchiodi, 2011;Naumburg, 2001;Wang, 2016). According to this action research, "painting analysis" is more than a projection of the therapist itself, rather it is important to guide the subject to face themselves through the production of the work.…”
Section: Art Therapy and Spiritualitymentioning
confidence: 99%