Talk:Art therapy
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[edit] Therapeutic
Therapeutic use of the expressive arts is a bit larger than the article suggests. The term art therapy has been adopted by professional art therapists after artists working in schools and hospitals began studying the health benefits of self-expression. The use of art as therapy is much older and more widely applied.
Every artist engages in a therapeutic process. Regardless of the medium, the process of creating a work of self expression moves energy in ways that support healing and growth. Artists have always shared the role of promoting and maintaining community health. Art is deeply part of what makes us human and what makes us successful in evolutionary terms. But art can also have specific effects on planetary (environmental) energies. The feng shui practice is in this category. A feng shui specialist manipulates objects and their relationships in order to tune energies that Western-trained healers don't recognize. At this level a healer uses art to search out wounds and disruptions in environmental energies and makes adjustments that benefit our relationship with the planet.
The use of art to support healing is probably as old as anything we can define as "human". We know how to do it. If our development is typical, we know how to make all the basic line elements of art by age five. We place our psychic energy into every piece of art we make, nomatter how simple. Other people can experience our energy without any training, without being able to discuss or define the experience, and with full benefit because what we know consciously is only a small part of our makeup. Our art contains more than ideas or beliefs. When someone experiences an artifact we have made--a dance, a song, a sculpture--his or her own energy flows into it and through it and is shaped by it. Their energy encounters our own because our artifact stamps it with the impression we have left. In psychic terms it works something like the groove on a phonograph record--their energy takes on our vibration. In this way very deep and beneficial interpersonal connections are forged and maintained through the arts. The arts demonstrate the communal aspects of human nature.
A skilled artist can make art that helps you heal, the true meaning of "art medicine". A very special artist can make art that helps heal the planet with the widest positive effects on human wellness. All these things happen simultaneously: our art is personal, communal, and global at the same time. The best definition of art therapy will lead us to recognize our inseperableness from the world around us.Trmcnamara 21:07, 30 Apr 2005 (UTC)
[edit] About this external link Free Mandalas ready to print and coloring for senior people
( In this page to go to the mandalas click at the link "to the mandalas" at the end of page )
Day by day will be there a big collection of mandalas, whose scheme of color has been chosen so that it does not cause confusions to the senior people, because there are not too similar colors.
This Link is not spam, is a sincere and serious supply to those who perhaps needs it more. Valvanera it is a real 89 years lady, who has been filling of sense part of her time coloring more that 200 mandalas in the last year, and want to share her positive experience. We, her relatives, do not agree with the deletion of this link because it has a clear social and cultural function.
Nov, 6th 2007 Update : Based on the origin of the visits to this page and their comments, thousands of people have benefited from finding this link here. Why deprive future visitors of this information? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.57.139.153 (talk) 09:20, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
The WP:SPAM (Wikipedia:Spam) define spam as :
"Adding external links to an article or user page for the purpose of promoting a website or a product is not allowed, and is considered to be spam."
This is not the case. This Link don´t tries to promote neither a Web nor a product. This Link tries to contribute with information on the way to find a specific type of mandalas : mandalas easy to be colored by senior people ( I do not see in this Article another Link with that information ).
I was thinking that in the flexibility of its inhabitants resided partly the greatness of Internet, and it seems that wikipedia share with me this thought when in the first paragraph of the guideline says :
"This page is considered a guideline on Wikipedia. It is generally accepted among editors and is considered a standard that all users should follow. However, it is not set in stone and should be treated with common sense and the occasional exception."
I don't want to revise my thoughts about the Net, please be a little flexible. Thank you.Valvanera 10:45, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] REFERENCES
A concern I have about the references being used in some parts of the article is that they appear to originate mostly in the Herald news, Patriot News, and not coming from actual Journals. Better to reference what an art therapist has to write about art therapy than what a journalist has to write about art therapy, if possible. You know by referencing the newspaper piece it's obviously second-hand reporting to begin with, and not a first hand account from the literature in the field. If the only way you know about art therapy is from a human interest story in your local newspaper, please don't edit the article or try to write about art therapy. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by J M B (talk • contribs) 20:32, 15 April 2007 (UTC).
[edit] moved this table from main article
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art therapy schools | |
art therapy issues | |
art therapy books and journals | |
art therapy & therapeutic arts conferences |
-- Mattbrundage 19:33, 18 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] 'Assessment' vs. 'diagnosis'
This section was moved here from /Comments subpage by EnviroboyTalkCs 23:37, 26 May 2008 (UTC)
I am new to this, and finding my way, so sorry if I get things wrong. I am a British Art Therapist(and a Council Member, British Association of Art Therapists). The art therapy article as it stands is very US based, and there are significant differences. I propose to start contributing to the page with this in mind. My first proposed addition is this, in the section on assessment tools:
'It is important to note however that attitudes to assessment differ internationally. 'Assessment' is easily confused with 'diagnosis'. Because diagnosis is a medical function rather than a therapeutic one, British art therapists tend to resist the implied medicalisation of what is essentially a non medical approach, which concentrates on 'seeing the person, not the label'. The British Association of Art Therapists statement on diagnosis simply states that ‘Art Therapists do not diagnose…' (http://www.baat.org.uk)'
Any thoughts on this before I go ahead?—Preceding unsigned comment added by Malcolmmax (talk • contribs)