重新构想数字媒介世界的艺术疗法:六角形关系

IF 2.3 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
S. Haywood, B. Grant
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引用次数: 4

摘要

艺术治疗师们早就意识到艺术治疗中与图像、艺术创作及其伴随过程有关的主体间复杂性。这些通常是参照移情和反移情的心理动力学概念来理解的。在这篇论文中,我们要问,当艺术治疗转移到网上并成为数字媒介时,这些过程会发生什么?“虚拟”的动力学如何影响图像和艺术制作,以及治疗关系?借鉴Schaverien和Jung关于移情和反移情的思想,我们提出了一种新的艺术治疗模式或“地图”,有助于思考这些问题,我们称之为“六边形关系”。迄今为止,已发表的文献倾向于展望将艺术治疗转移到网上的后勤和实用性,在关于数字媒介艺术治疗的新兴叙事中,考虑到复杂的人际动态占据的中心空间较少。我们建议,将我们的模型应用于实践可能会支持艺术治疗师在在线工作中获得更深层次、意识更少、可能更具象征意义的材料,为客户的过程服务。我们邀请艺术治疗师和客户参考他们自己的数字媒介艺术治疗经验来考虑我们的模型,并在他们自己的背景下测试我们的问题和假设。简明语言总结艺术治疗师的工作理念是,在艺术治疗中制作的图像受到制作图像的人(通常被称为“客户”)、艺术治疗师和艺术治疗过程所处环境之间关系的影响。制作和反思图像是一种理解和处理客户“外部”生活和“内部世界”(例如,他们的思想、感受、想象和信仰)中发生的一切的方式。现在,许多艺术治疗都在网上进行,特别是自新冠肺炎大流行开始以来,我们都是数字世界的一部分,在如何与他人沟通和联系方面。我们认为考虑艺术治疗(包括治疗关系、艺术制作过程和制作的图像)可能会受到数字环境的影响是有帮助的,因此我们写了这篇论文来探索这些想法。我们向读者展示了一张我们称之为“六边形关系”的图表,以帮助解释我们的意思。我们认为这将有助于我们更多地了解数字世界中艺术治疗的情况,使这种治疗帮助对客户及其艺术治疗师更有效、更有意义。我们希望客户和艺术治疗师能够亲自测试这些想法,并与我们进行对话(也许可以通过发表在艺术治疗杂志上的这篇论文),讨论我们的想法与实际经验的关系。视频摘要阅读文字记录在Vimeo上观看视频©2022英国艺术治疗师协会
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reimagining art therapy for the digitally-mediated world: a Hexagonal Relationship
ABSTRACT Art Therapists have long been aware of the intersubjective complexities that are evoked in art therapy in relation to images, art-making and their attendant processes. These have often been understood with reference to the psychodynamic concepts of transference and countertransference. In this paper we ask, what happens to these processes when art therapy moves online and becomes digitally-mediated? How do the dynamics of ‘the Virtual’ affect the image and art-making, and the therapeutic relationship? Drawing on Schaverien and Jung’s ideas about transference and countertransference, we propose a new model or ‘map’ of Art Therapy which helps to think about these questions, which we call a ‘Hexagonal Relationship’. To date, published literature has tended to foreground the logistics and practicalities of moving art therapy online, with consideration of complex interpersonal dynamics occupying less of a central space in emerging narratives about digitally-mediated art therapy. We suggest that applying our model to practice could potentially support art therapists to access deeper, less conscious and perhaps more symbolic levels of material in online work, in service of the client’s process. We invite art therapists and clients to consider our model with reference to their own experiences of digitally-mediated art therapy, and to test out our questions and hypotheses in their own contexts. Plain-language summary Art Therapists work with the idea that the images made in art therapy are affected by the relationship between the person making the image (often known as ‘the client’), the art therapist, and the environment in which the art therapy session takes place. Making and reflecting on images is a way of understanding and working with whatever is going on for the client, both in their ‘external’ life and also in their ‘internal world’ (for example, their thoughts, feelings, imaginings and beliefs). A lot of art therapy now happens online, particularly since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and we are all part of the digital world in terms of how we communicate and relate with others. We think it is helpful to consider how art therapy (including the therapeutic relationship, art-making processes and the images made) might be affected by the digital environment and so we have written this paper to explore these ideas. We show readers a diagram of what we call the ‘Hexagonal Relationship’ to help explain what we mean. We think this will help us to understand more of what happens in art therapy in the digital world, making this kind of therapeutic help more effective and meaningful for clients and their art therapists. We hope that clients and art therapists will test out these ideas for themselves and come into a conversation with us (perhaps through papers like this one, published in art therapy journals) about how well our ideas stand up to actual experience. Video Abstract Read the transcript Watch the video on Vimeo © 2022 British Association of Art Therapists
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CiteScore
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