Posts in Vol 5 / Issue 3
President's Message

Amanda Gee (Lower Sackville, NS)

I forgot about all of the spiders in Nova Scotia and have found myself fascinated by them since moving home. They are always ‘creating’ and ‘recreating’ building functional structures that are full of beauty when caught in the sunlight or glistening with dew. As an artist and an art therapist I am also always creating and recreating, always growing, and always trying to create and recreate safe creative spaces in which my clients can do the same.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Editor's Note

Sarah Gysin (Ottawa, ON)

This issue, we invited art therapists to share stories of how they use artmaking as a tool for action or have witnessed the impact art-making can have in their clients and community as a way of stirring, drawing out and forward, or instilling motion—whether on a personal level or a systemic one.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
A Conversation with LIFE as Medicine

Art Therapy Conversations
Rebecca Montgomery (Vancouver, BC)

LIFE as Medicine is a Circle of First Nations, Metis and Inuit Creative and Expressive Arts Therapists whose work promotes collaborative relational healing with Indigenous Peoples and communities. This month, Rebecca had the pleasure of connecting with the three members of its leadership team, Dr. Fyre Jean Graveline, Jen Vivian, and Jean Tait.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
The power of choice

Shae Anthony (Vancouver, BC)

In offering art therapy, therapists support an individual’s ability to choose and access art materials, to sit in a calm space, and to take rest. Despite facing circumstances that people can’t change, when art making, an individual is free to express themselves on their own terms.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Sharing the Mysterious Language of Art

Anna Nike Leskowsky (Toronto, ON)

Every time I passed by the photograph displayed on the wall of my dining room, I thought to myself, “I must draw this image.” Many years ago, my grandfather, an architect and an artist, captured the tranquility of his daughter’s rehearsal by taking a picture. I suspect that then he wanted to do exactly the same thing I was now planning to do: make a drawing of the young dancer.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Explorer l’approche sensorimotrice bilatérale d’Elbrecht et amener le changement par l’autocompassion à travers la recherche heuristique

Pascale Laberge-Milot (Sherbrooke, QC)

A travers un processus créatif favorisant l’interconnexion des deux hémisphères du cerveau, tout en revitalisant les sensations, le corps et les émotions, cette démarche m’a permis d’expérimenter en quoi cela pouvait apporter plus de vitalité et d’entièreté à l’existence.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Pourquoi et comment les arts plastiques et la visio-consultation se prêtent aux ateliers d'art-thérapie ?

Emmanuelle Cesari & Aline El Ramy (France, Lebanon)

D’où l’importance de l’art-thérapie qui vient remplacer l’expérience traumatisante de la personne par une autre expérience de création, de plaisir et de joie de vivre. A long terme, l’art-thérapie peut modifier le fonctionnement cérébral et donc permet de court-circuiter la transmission transgénérationnelle de traumatismes et de problèmes psychologiques.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Arts-based research workshop on response art

Elisabeth Ioannides & Maria Konti (Athens, Greece)

Response art functions as the intermediate space where the art psychotherapist’s personal experience meets something else. The participants were invited in this workshop to answer/explore/wonder particularly on this “something else”: through a case study, their own experience, and the experience gained in the workshop, they were invited to ponder on how they connect response art to their practice as art psychotherapists.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Making It, CRATE

Christy Herdman (Calgary, AB)

The overarching goal is to be a catalyst for change and to use art as a medium to enhance the emotional intelligence of the next generation; encouraging one to feel the feels, knowing all feelings are valid. CRATE Workshop for Kids series provide children the tools to build their vocabulary of different emotions to enhance their emotional competence.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin
Bouquets of gratitude

Nature’s Way
Taylor Bourassa (Ottawa, ON)

Nature’s Way is a regular column in Envisage that explores eco-art therapy and invites practices of enhancing our relationship with the earth. In this issue, Envisage writer Taylor Bourassa shares the importance of recognising, reflecting, and expressing gratitude for the important places in our lives.

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Vol 5 / Issue 3Sarah Gysin