What is Art Therapy?
Art therapy is simply the professional therapeutic ability to use
artwork that has been done by individuals who desire personal
development. This development has not been able to be achieved, due
to trauma, personal crisis, illness, and certain challenges that
have affected their life.
People of all ages use art therapy, done by a professional art
therapist who has been trained extensively about the human
development, artistic traditions in a multitude of cultures,
psychological theories, and the healing abilities regarding the use
of art. Services are provided to these individuals through art
therapy because they cannot articulate through words, emotions, and
feelings about their true state of mind.
The professional settings that participate with art therapy
methods are mental health services, rehabilitation, medical
institutions, education services, nursing homes, corporations,
forensic agencies, community outreach, and independent
practices.
Strict standards for art therapy have been established by the
American Art Therapy Association, Inc. (AATA) and The Art Therapy
Credentials Board, Inc. (ATCB). Some individual states regulate
their own practices of art therapy, while other states allow art
therapists to become licensed counselors or mental health
therapists. These art therapists utilize art-based assessment
instruments to determine their client's level of functioning. From
this they are able to formulate a certain level of treatment
objectives, decide what strengths and weaknesses their client has,
gaining a better understanding of who their client is and the
problems they have, and be able to evaluate their client's
progress.
The Master level of training and education for an art therapist
is mandatory, as ensuring the appropriate usage and application of
drawing tests, evaluation of the instrument validity, and its
reliability is extremely important to better serve the client.
According to Donna J. Betts, Ph.D., ATR-BC, in her 2005 Doctoral
Dissertation, some of the top art therapy tests that can be used
are:
• Favorite Kind of Day (AFKOD)
• Person Picking an Apple from a Tree (PPAT)
• Bird’s Nest Drawing (BND)
• Bridge Drawing
• Diagnostic Drawing Series (DDS)
• Child Diagnostic Drawing Series (CDDS)
Rating instruments are also investigated, which can include:
• Descriptive Assessment of Psychiatric Art (DAPA)
• DDS Rating Guide and Drawing Analysis Form (DAF)
• Formal Elements Art Therapy Scale (FEATS).
These are just a few of the art therapy assessment tools that
can be used by art therapists, in clinical settings or in research.
Each art therapy tool is a structured assessment that are
collected under standardized conditions. Most are developed to
provide a compatibility with psychological testing and psychiatric
evaluations:
• Art Therapy-Projective Imagery Assessment (ATPIA)
• Draw-A-Story Screening for Depression (DAS)
• Used to identify children and adolescents at risk for harming
others or themselves.
• Through the artwork, it can be seen that significant differences
will emerge between aggressive and non-aggressive groups in its
emotional content and self-image, in addition to
- Using Art Therapy for Children
- The Exposure of Art Therapy Projects
- Using Clip Art for Massage Therapy
- Development of the American Art Therapy Association
- American Journal of Art Therapy
- The Top Art Therapy Courses
- Magical Applications of Art Therapy Activities
- Child Art Therapy for Probing the Unconscious
- Carl S. Jung--Art Therapy in the Making
- Membership Applications in the Art Therapy Association
- Art Therapy for Treatment of Schizophrenia
- Developing Modality of the Art Therapy Schools
- Art Therapy in the Schools--Does it Work?
- The Future of Art Therapy Jobs
- Using Massage Therapy Clip Art
- What About Art Therapy Programs?
- True Meaning of the Art Therapy Salary
- BACP Art Therapy Provisions
- The History of Art Therapy
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