Posts in Vol 4 / Issue 3
President's Message

Amanda Gee (Lower Sackville, NS)

Across the country and the world I know we are all adjusting, adapting and creating new rhythms in our lives and in our work in this ongoing pandemic. Things sure have changed, and while some things will go back to our old normal, some things will be changed forever.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
Editors' Notes

Sarah Gysin (Ottawa, ON) & Patricia Ki (Tkaronto)

We are still learning the beats to the chorus of this new world, and in doing so, are cultivating our own rhythms in response. We wish to continue Envisage’s commitment to social justice, and cultivate it as a space where we learn, share, collaborate and support one another.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
The Healing Path: Interview with Linda Manitowabi

Art Therapy Conversations
Rebecca Montgomery (Vancouver, BC)

Linda Manitowabi is an Anishnaabe-kwe from Wikwemikong First Nation who combines art therapy with traditional teachings and ceremonies of the Ojibwe Midewiwin Society, connecting Indigenous people to their healing journey. Linda met with Rebecca and shared her stories and journey in the healing arts.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
The Power of Art: Art for Social Justice

Elene Lam (Hamilton, ON)

By sharing examples of community art projects I have been part of, I hope to illustrate how art-making can bring transformative change at individual, collective and societal levels. My intent is to inspire art therapists to see themselves as social activists and to recognize their role in social change.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
Art Gallery: New Rhythms

Artwork by Sarvatmika Rajeev (Chennai, India), Caralyn Randa (Vancouver, BC), Sherry Lynn (Grimsby, ON), Hyon Stee (Victoria, BC), and Dillon Lewchuk (Victoria, BC).

Art therapists share reflections on the continual emerging through experiences of the pandemic and awareness of colonial violence.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
Heartbeat with the new Rhythms

Olivia Tan (Vancouver, BC)

Creating this art gave me the strength to find the rhythms of my inner peace, just like the heartbeat, it vibrated, ready to move on. Instead of spreading the wings, the embraced wings were like hugs, which gave me a sense of comfort, support and courage.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
A Return to Self and Self-in-relation: Reflections on Resting and Trusting the Process of ‘Being’

Ana Kuzmic-Garant (Toronto, ON)

The outer world is coiled within systems that try to constrain it, yet it is just another pure vessel at its core. Arbitrary forces don’t shape or define it. There is a rhythm. From there, the ‘other’ is present as yet another whole: beings, objects, the planes we currently exist on, and the landscapes we occupy. There is digression and there is repetition, yet more importantly, there is a fruitful allowance that responds to one’s calls for healing.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc
Finding Foxes: A Short Film

Lisa Nackan (Thornhill, ON)

The summer of the pandemic was one of life and death, and the contradiction between the confinements of lockdown we were experiencing, and the magic and freedom I discovered in the midst of trees, silent witness to the marvellous hidden lives of the foxes in my neighbourhood.

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Vol 4 / Issue 3Claudia Kloc