| Literature DB >> 29690592 |
Abstract
The paper will draw on materials from arts therapies literature and comments from experts’ panels to discuss some specific characteristics of the arts therapies and to investigate the role of aesthetic engagement for resilience and mental well-being. The arts increasingly find their way as interventions in mental health domains. However, explorations into the specific mechanisms that underpin the therapeutic effect of arts-based activities are still scarce. Qualitative data were collected from a thematic literature review and expert comments on meaningful working procedures in arts therapies. Analysis of multiple data sources revealed core themes and core procedures that occur across arts therapy modalities. This paper presents a practice informed model of arts-based methods in mental health that may serve as a conceptual frame of reference for arts therapists and as study material on the applicability of arts therapy interventions for specific mental health settings.Entities:
Keywords: aesthetics; arts therapies; dance therapy; mental health; music therapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29690592 PMCID: PMC5946100 DOI: 10.3390/bs8040041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Figure 1Multi-disciplinary position of the arts therapies.
Art related activities and procedures in the arts therapies.
| Activity/Procedure | In the Arts | In Arts Therapy |
|---|---|---|
| Invite | into space of potentials; to discover new possibilities | therapist as holding partner creates a situation that offers holding and opportunities for sensing & acting |
| Engage | into relation with materials, structures or partner | therapist creates the situation such as to afford development (into new action potentials) |
| Play | use an “as if” perspective | use of aesthetic illusion to alleviate from stagnation or illness |
| Explore | experiment with possibilities | experiment with new possibilities; try out and explore within enactive engagement |
| Replicate | repeat structures or motives that occurred to suit the artistic choices; remember and reproduce, building a repertoire | repeat meaningful patterns and structures that fit personal preference, the situation or combine interpersonal differences; cognitive engagement during remembering; develop enactive cognition and executive functioning; rehearse behavioural changes and develop mastery |
| Interact | address, show, connect, combine with partner’s materials | initially the therapist supports the patient to develop towards self-other-relatedness |
| Share | show, play together in duet/ensemble | performativity, self-other relatedness |
| Change | deliberately apply variations in structures, ways of playing/ways of moving | discover and explore alternative perspectives and actions |
| Improvise | while playing find new possibilities of expressing and articulating; connecting small meaningful entities | develop flexibility and flow of action; weaving threads from smaller entities; flow between interacting players |
| Select | select structures that fit the situation, or that are considered well suited to express personal experiences | learn to make decisions on what fit the personal preferences or capacities |
| Compose | combine findings from improvisations into meaningful entities, combinations | meaning making; agency to form a gestalt |
| Perform | show skills and expressive capacities | becoming visible, stand out |