Developing Modality of the Art Therapy
Schools
Once art therapy became part of the psychotherapeutic modality,
another avenue opened up for healing--Art Therapy Schools. Visual
expression prior to the 1940s was based on the artist's ability to
clearly express themselves, using techniques dating back to the
Paleolithic era and the first cave art.
Two entirely separate things, art and healing, both complemented
each other but were basically not connected as a distinctive
professional tool, that is until the development of art therapy.
Art Therapy Schools were then begun, as the interest in the field
became popular with children with a developing ability to reach the
darkest recesses of the human mind. Up until then, their trauma and
crisis had been tackled by traditional talk therapies that had been
used with anything short of success.
Art Therapy Schools are on the rise due to the combination of
traditional psychotherapeutic theories and techniques that work in
diverse populations, such as children, adolescents, and adults. Art
therapy works because it is healing, because it works through
traumatic issues--by using a person's subconscious creativity in
their drawings, paintings, photography, sculpture, and even their
writing. Their underlying feelings combined with subconscious
thoughts help the clients gain better insight about what has
happened to them, assisted by professional art therapists and Art
Therapy Schools.
Art Therapy Schools train individuals in the field of
psychological assessments in order to administer and interpret
them. Not a new thing, in 1906 a German psychiatrist by the name of
Fritz Mohr created the world's first drawing assessment for the
purpose of psychological purposes. Right after that in 1926,
a researcher by the name of Florence Goodenough created a way to
measure the intelligence of children with the Draw-A-Man-Test,
whereas the more details the child being tested could incorporate
into the drawing--the smarter they were.
C.J. Jung once said, "The hands know how to solve a riddle with
which the intellect struggles in vain." With this in mind, the Art
Therapy Schools are simply another piece of the puzzle when it
comes to working with emotional conflicts on many levels of the
mind. And when it comes to working with children or adolescents who
are troubled and have many issues, art therapy helps to identify
and reconcile such things. Visual art processes are used as the
primary modality for treatments and assessments, whereas art
education teaches the children or adolescents to produce and
evaluate their own art work, not analyze what message it is
subconsciously saying.
Schools and other institutions that work with troubled
individuals share responsibilities, with the art therapist
participating as a member of the treatment group. The goal of this
group is to successfully assist in the development of a meaningful
identity for the troubled individual.
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