Art Therapy Students in India
Read this article about George Washington art therapy students working with clients of the Banyan.
“The 16 women, all students of art therapy, have been quietly helping ease the pain of cancer patients, differently-abled children in schools, substance-abuse victims, and the homeless and mentally-challenged women of The Banyan. And they do it all with nothing more than pots of paint, and handfuls of clay.”
– Chithira Vijaykumar, The Hindu
Art Therapy Around the World #6
Art as Food for the Spirit
Thanks to Sara Windrem, who brought this article to my attention.
Veteran Art Therapy
Check out this video of Maureen Harvey’s art therapy program with military veterans who suffer from drug and alcohol addiction.
Also, through the link, you can view lots of other videos about art and it’s power to heal, change and support.
Art Therapy and Military Sexual Trauma
Read about Jessica Kenyon, a veteran herself, who works with survivors of military sexual trauma.
Arts and Science Reading
Taken from Science Daily, here are some articles that got me thinking. Hopefully you’ll find them inspirational too.
Oakland, CA- Green Youth Arts and Media Center
Green Youth Arts and Media Center, an Art in Action sub-project, is set to open in mid January with state of the art computers, high-end software and recording studios. They’re planning to serve more than 200 Oakland inner city youth who are coping with gangs, violence and struggling to stay hopeful. According to the SF Chronicle, the Green Center is being funded by Peapod, a foundation started by the music group the Black Eyed Peas, and Adobe, maker of software such as Photoshop and Illustrator.
Read more about the center in this article by the SF Chronicle.
Bad Press, Artx and the Rehabilitation of Terrorists—Reaction of the Art Therapy Community
Here are a few other responses regarding the media’s, bloggers’ and twitterers’ recent comments about art therapy’s role in the rehabilitation of terrorists.
Bad Press, Artx and the Rehabilitation of Terrorists
I suppose some bad press about art therapy is kind of a good thing. Finally it’s big enough to be on people’s radar.
Yesterday, it was reported that two released Guantanamo prisoners who received rehabilitation in Saudi Arabia, which included art therapy, were behind the terrorist plot to blow up a plane headed from Amsterdam to Detroit on 12/25/2009. This maybe the same program that I blogged about in early 2008, or something similar.
Not only is the media putting down the idea of using art therapy for the rehabilitation of terrorists, for example ABC news stating,
“Saudi officials concede its program has had its “failures” but insist that, overall, the effort has helped return potential terrorists to a meaningful life.
One program gives the former detainees paints and crayons as part of the rehabilitation regimen.”
But art therapy is also being talked about in the blogosphere. For example, Ann Althouse, the prominent law-professor-blogger, jokes about the use of art therapy and states,
“Whether it was weak art or strong art, it was not something to be prescribed to turn men away from terrorism.”
Do terrorists who underwent art therapy treatment, and still tried to blow up a plane, prove the failure of art therapy? After re-reading the original article I posted from CBC news, I noticed that art therapy was a part of an experimental rehabilitation program that included other types of therapy. I’m certainly not an expert on the rehabilitation of terrorists, but this program was taking on a huge task that has not been undertaken before (hence the term “experiment” in the beginning of the article). It seems as if its goal was to change the deep-seated ideology of people who harbor extreme and violent views and then return them to the same communities that supported this view to begin with. It’s like sending the rehabed alcoholic back in the community without addressing the social aspects of their behavior. Perhaps it’s even dangerous for these “ex”-terrorists to stop conforming with their “ex”-social community. I’m just speculating. As I said, I’m no expert on such matters, but my feeling is that the failure of this program has little to do with art therapy and its efficacy. Rather, it has everything to do with the nature of forcing ideological change, which is unlikely to happen even when one considers the power of art.
Making art therapy out to be child’s play is a misrepresentation of what art therapy is. Crayons and paint can be powerful tools for creation, exploration and self-transformation. Is it a guaranteed cure for all that ails you? Can it make the suicide bomber into Mother Theresa? Of course not. And guess what: any (therapy) program that offers utopia is trying to fool you.