四面反射镜:艺术治疗师的自画像是应对在线艺术治疗挑战的见证

IF 2.3 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Liat Shamri-Zeevi, A. Katz
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要背景本研究探讨了在线艺术治疗及其使用数字电脑屏幕作为新冠肺炎大流行的非自愿结果对艺术治疗的影响。目的研究艺术治疗师在自画像中表现出的可见性和自我概念体验。方法16名艺术治疗师被要求从他们的网络图片中画出他们的自画像,然后接受半结构化的采访。主题分析的六个阶段被用来定义采访和自画像中出现的主题,并辅以对艺术产品的现象学评估。结果分析揭示了三个主要主题:在艺术治疗的网络环境中定位自己,艺术治疗师在屏幕上和他们的自画像中的形象,以及在线创意治疗空间中的艺术治疗师-客户关系。结论和对实践的启示这种在线治疗环境形成了一套新的四面关系,被称为“四面反射镜”,因为治疗师和客户在屏幕上看到自己和对方。研究结果表明,制作屏幕上的自画像使艺术治疗师能够更好地了解在线媒体,从而有助于推进治疗目标。标语摘要在新冠肺炎封锁期间,许多形式的治疗无法再亲自进行,而是转移到了网上。艺术治疗师在提供在线治疗时面临着特殊的挑战,因为治疗师、客户和艺术品之间的关系被打乱了。艺术材料的选择通常取决于客户有什么可用的。主页设置并不总是为客户端表达提供安全避难所。眼神交流和能见度会受到网络连接和摄像头质量的影响。在线治疗工作提出了看到和被看到的问题。在这项研究中,16名艺术治疗师被要求以屏幕上的形象为模型绘制他们的自画像,然后参加采访。出现了三个主要主题:将自己定位在艺术治疗的在线环境中,艺术治疗师在屏幕上和自画像中的形象,以及治疗师与客户的关系。治疗师认为,在网络空间中定位自己的需要需要包容、灵活性,以及治疗师和客户对变化的快速适应。这些主题被概念化为一面四面反射镜,治疗师、他们的形象、客户和他们的形象都在这里互动。在在线课程中,艺术治疗师既在场也不在场,这会影响房间的布置和运动、创作过程、干预的性质以及对艺术品的观察。四面镜展示了“我如何看待自己,客户如何看待我”。制作自画像并对其进行反思,使治疗师能够更好地理解这种双重凝视,以及创作和治疗过程如何在在线艺术治疗中展开,从而影响创作过程、干预的性质和对艺术作品的观察。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The four-sided reflecting mirror: art therapists’ self-portraits as testimony to coping with the challenges of online art therapy
ABSTRACT Background This study explored the ways in which online art therapy and its use of digital computer screens as an involuntary outcome of the COVID-19 pandemic, has affected art therapy. Aims It examined the visibility and self-concept experiences of art therapists as manifested in their self-portraits. Method Sixteen art therapists were asked to draw their self-portrait from their online image, and then responded to a semi-structured interview. Six stages of thematic analysis were used to define the themes that emerged from the interviews and the self-portraits, which was complemented by a phenomenological evaluation of the art products. Results The analysis revealed three main themes: locating oneself in the online setting of art therapy, the image of the art therapists as reflected on screen and in their self-portraits, and the art therapist-client relationship in the online creative therapy space. Conclusions and implications for practice This online therapeutic context, which forms a new four-sided set of relations, is dubbed the ‘four-sided reflecting mirror’, since therapist and client see both themselves and each other on the screen. The findings suggest that producing self-portraits as seen onscreen enabled the art therapists to achieve a greater understanding of the online medium and as such can contribute to advancing the goals of therapy. Plain-language summary During the COVID-19 lockdowns, many forms of therapy could no longer take place in person, and shifted online. Art therapists face specific challenges in providing online treatment because the relationship between the therapist, the client and the artwork is disrupted. The choice of art materials often depends on what the client has available. The home setting does not always provide a safe haven for client expression. Eye contact and visibility are affected by the quality of the internet connection and the camera. Therapeutic work online raises the issue of seeing and being seen. In this study, 16 art therapists were asked to draw their self-portraits using their onscreen image as a model and then take part in interviews. Three main themes emerged: locating oneself in the online setting of art therapy, the image of the art therapist as reflected onscreen and, in the self-portraits, and the therapist-client relationship. The therapists considered that the need to position themselves in the online space required containment, flexibility, and a rapid adaptation to change by both the therapist and the client. These themes are conceptualised as a four-sided reflecting mirror, where the therapists, their image, the clients and their images all interact. During an online session, the art therapist is both present and absent from the client’s creative space in a way that affects the arrangement and movement in the room, the creative process, the nature of the intervention and the observation of the artwork. The four-sided mirror shows how ‘I see myself and how the client sees me’. Producing self-portraits and reflecting on them enabled the therapists to better understand this dual gaze, and how creative and therapeutic processes can unfold in online art therapy in a way that affects the creative process, the nature of interventions and observation of the artwork.
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CiteScore
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