Carl S. Jung--Art Therapy in the
Making
Carl Jung, known for the Jung art therapy theory, was one of the
colleagues of the famous Austrian psychiatrist, Sigmund Freud, the
founder of the psychoanalytic school of psychology. Freud became
internationally recognized with his groundbreaking theories
regarding the conscious vs. unconscious parts of the mind.
Simultaneously beginning his Jung art therapy theories, Jung felt
that even though Freud made the goal of his therapy the unconscious
conscious, he felt that it was made to sound as if it were an
unpleasant "cauldron of seething desires."
But according to the American Art Therapy Association, Inc.,
Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud together, along with many other
psychiatric individuals at the time, had a big hand in the
development of art therapy. It was thought that these historical
practitioners had the same insight that entered into the
development of art therapy, along with its application of conflict
resolution. The healing and learning that was derived from the
"talk therapy" these men eventually became known for, was thought
to have built a base for uncovering the unconscious levels of the
mind. But many feel that it was the Jung art therapy that seemed to
be the method upon which today's art therapy received its
roots.
One of the tools Carl Jung used for his patients to express
their unconscious feelings was art, bringing forth the Jung art
therapy method. Influenced by both psychology and psychiatry,
Jung's influence was based on his devotion to the psychological
meaning that was inside of each art piece. Freud himself never had
his patients do their own artwork, but Carl Jung encouraged it. "To
paint what we see before us, " Jung wrote, "is a different art from
painting what we see within."
Totally rejecting Freud's theories, Jung expanded the field of
psychoanalysis on a personal level. The Jung art therapy included
artwork of all levels, the interaction of mythology and its
influence on the present moment, and the thoughts of native people
which included the round spiritual mandala and the Sanskrit.
Many felt he had more common sense than Freud, as the he felt the
individual's psyche had more than one interacting systems.
One of these was the ego, as he dismissed Freud's superego and id,
feeling that the ego alone was considered a personal unconscious
state of the mind but as a fundamental collective unconscious
one.
With much more of an optimistic view of art than did Freud, with
his Jung art therapy views Carl Jung felt that psychological art
originated within the psyche and was considered to be intelligible
to the general mass. But even more, he discovered that another
style called visionary art, dew on the collective unconscious and
was a lot deeper and with less individual nature. This sort of art
were of images--appearing in dreams and in the art form--and were
more spontaneoius and were considered to be more fulfilling images.
He considered them as metaphors that held the troubled individual's
separate worlds together in a world of trauma and chaos.
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