1st Edition
Environmental Arts Therapy The Wild Frontiers of the Heart
Foreword
Mary-Jayne Rust
Acknowledgements
Introduction by the editors
Ian Siddons Heginworth and Gary Nash
Part I Environmental arts therapy in context
Chapter 1. Turning: the emergence and growth of environmental arts therapy in the British Isles
Ian Siddons Heginworth
Chapter 2. Weaving the threads of theory and experience: a review of the literature
Gary Nash
Part II Childhood, love and attachment: the heart of the matter
Chapter 3. The wild inside: offering children natural materials and an ecopsychological understanding of self within art therapy
Lydia Boon
Chapter 4. EarthWays: Environmental arts therapy for repairing insecure attachment and developing creative response-ability in an insecure world
Lia Ponton
Chapter 5. Bringing the outside in: reflecting upon mother within a pilot group in environmental arts therapy
Michelle Edinburgh
Part III Feminine and masculine: putting feeling first
Chapter 6. Meeting the wounded feminine: trauma-informed environmental arts therapy as an approach to working with physical illness
Susie Thompson
Chapter 7. The wood between the worlds: encountering the wounded healer in environmental arts therapy
William Secretan
Chapter 8. The tapping on the window: environmental arts therapy and the integrated self
Auriel Eagleton
Part IV The cycle of the year: working with the seasons
Chapter 9. Taking art therapy outdoors: a Circle of Trees
Gary Nash
Chapter 10. Creating connections: introducing environmental arts therapy in to London’s green spaces
Simon Woodward
Chapter 11. Space to move, explore and create: taking art therapy into the outdoor environment in adult mental health services
Pamela Stanley
Part V Elderhood and endings: the wild road on
Chapter 12. Trees of life and death: a journey into the heart of Transylvania to use environmental arts therapy with groups of adults and staff in palliative care
Hannah Monteiro
Chapter 13. Growing elders: the cultivation and collaboration of an elder women’s group in the woods
Deborah Kelly and Vanessa Jones
Epilogue
Ian Siddons Heginworth
Biography
Ian Siddons Heginworth is the author of Environmental Arts Therapy and the Tree of Life, the book that has inspired the growth of the environmental arts therapy movement in the UK. He leads the postgraduate certificate course in environmental arts therapy at the London Art Therapy Centre and runs a private practice in Devon.
Gary Nash is an art therapist and educator in art and environmental arts therapy training. He co-founded the London Art Therapy Centre in 2009 where he is Clinical Co-Director providing individual art therapy, supervision and group environmental arts therapy.
"The deep connection with nature’s capacity for healing is intrinsic to all life throughout history and across all cultures. In recent times there has been renewed interest from psychotherapists to work with clients in nature. In this exciting new book, arts therapists Ian Siddons Heginworth and Gary Nash have chosen a collection of essays on Environmental Arts Therapy introducing new fresh voices to the discipline. As the practice develops and each Environmental Arts therapist forges a way with diverse emerging perspectives, there is simultaneously a return to older traditions where the wise elders are taking people back into nature for healing and growth. Our flourishing community of Environmental Arts therapists describe and reflect on their various considered and creative approaches."
- Hephzibah Kaplan, Art Therapist and Director of the London Art Therapy Centre
"This book is an exciting addition to the growing literature on environmental arts therapies. The editors show how this movement has become an established form of arts therapy, drawing on previous work by others, and leading to their environmental arts therapy course, the first of its kind, based on the cycle of the year. The book also contains fresh voices taking environmental arts therapies into new contexts. At a time of global environmental crisis, this book paves the way to a new way of envisioning therapy, showing the benefits of taking people and therapy out into nature, or bringing nature into the therapy room. It reminds us of the importance of our environment – not an optional extra but the ground of our being."
- Dr Marian Liebmann, OBE, Art Therapist, teacher and author of art therapy books






