1st Edition

Images of Art Therapy New Developments in Theory and Practice

    244 Pages
    by Routledge

    244 Pages
    by Routledge

    Working through the process of image-making in a therapeutic relationship, the art therapist is able to explore feelings, fantasies, and myths in different setting with diverse client groups. Originally published in 1987 Images of Art Therapy is a collection of essays by experienced art therapists which discuss and develop both theoretical and practical issues central to art therapy. The authors describe how they work through the use of illustrated case material which includes children, adolescents, and adults, in normal schools, psychiatric hospitals, therapeutic communities, and out-patient clinics. Theoretical considerations include bereavement, play, transference, symbolism, and verbal versus non-verbal communication.

    The first book on art therapy, Art as Therapy, edited by Tessa Dalley, was a useful introduction to the subject. Images of Art Therapy expands the issues raised in the earlier book in more depth, and developed new and innovative ideas which it was hoped at the time, would influence both the theory and practice of art therapy in the future.

    Foreword  Contributors  1 Tessa Dalley Art as therapy: some new perspectives  2 Caroline Case A search for meaning: loss and transition in art therapy with children  3 Joy Schaverien The scapegoat and the talisman: transference in art therapy  4 Felicity Weir The role of symbolic expression in its relation to art therapy: a Kleinian approach  5 Diana Halliday Peak experiences: the individuation of children  6 Patricia Nowell Hall Art therapy: a way of healing the split  7 Diane Waller Art therapy in adolescence: a metaphorical view of a profession in progress  Name index  Index of case studies  Subject index

    Biography

    Dalley, Tessa; Case, Caroline; Schaverien, Joy; Weir, Felicity; Halliday, Diana; Hall, Patsy Nowell; Waller, Diane