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Art Therapist

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AVG. SALARY

$89,230

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Communication plays a central role in art therapy. Therapists work with people who are often in difficult or painful periods in their life. Through art, the therapist hopes to help the individual communicate their feelings. That means the therapist must have excellent communication skills.

Janice Hoshino is a registered art therapist who now teaches at a university. She explains that an art therapist must understand types of communication beyond the spoken word. "Our society highly values verbal skills and articulation, yet so much of how we operate really is non-verbal and symbolic. That's why art therapy can be so effective, because it cuts through all of the intellectualizations and the language difficulties that a lot of people have."

You are an art therapist. You are hoping to set up a summer workshop in conjunction with the local school system. You want to be able to use this medium to help students who are having difficulty adjusting.

Unfortunately, the school director doesn't know anything about art therapy. You have to explain it.

This is what you tell the school director:

Art therapy is a form of psychotherapy. It allows for emotional expression and healing through non-verbal means. Children often cannot easily express themselves verbally. Adults, on the other hand, may use words to intellectualize and distance themselves from their emotions.

Art therapy enables the client to break through these barriers using simple art materials. No previous art experience is necessary.

The therapist provides a safe and non-threatening environment. She invites the individual to express his feelings through a variety of art media. The individual is encouraged to empower himself through the exploration and interpretation of his own art.

The artwork can be spontaneous. The therapist may also direct it. People can often approach difficult issues and convey a message much more clearly with art than with words. The art serves as a record of events. The individual can later look at that record. It may help the person eventually to understand the events better.

The art therapist helps individuals express feelings too difficult to talk about. This helps increase self-esteem and confidence. People can develop healthy coping skills, and identify feelings and blocks to emotional expression and growth. Art therapy also provides an avenue for communication. It makes verbal expression more accessible.

(Excerpt from Art Therapy in Canada website, with permission from Petrea Hansen-Adamidis.)

The director has a few questions. How do you answer him?

  1. What are the differences in the way children and adults communicate?
  2. Do people need to be artistically inclined to benefit?
  3. Name three benefits that an individual may get from art therapy.

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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