台灣藝術治療學會會訊 第十期 200905

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Tata Magazine 200905 No10

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  • 1Taiwan Art Therapy Association

    140(04)22183365 (04)22183390 www.arttherapy.org.tw [email protected]

    1 5

    Dr. Doris A.Arrington Notre Dame de NamurUniversity

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  • 6Caroline Case

    Tessa Dally The hand-book of art therapy

    1990 Working with children in arttherapy

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  • 7Caroline Case

    Dear all I started work as an art teacher for three years but

    found myself being more interested in the children whowere painting images from their own imagination, not nec-essarily the things that they were meant to be doing. I wasalso interested in the childrens lives and struggles so Iretrained as an art therapist in 1973 at St. Albans ArtCollege (which became part of Hertfordshire University).

    I then worked for several years in an Observation,Reception and Assessment Centre for children who hadbecome Looked After by the Local Authority. I worked asan art therapist in the school and went on to take my MA atBirmingham Art College writing about bereavement for mydissertation (in those days you studied first for a Diplomaand then worked before taking an MA).

    I then moved from London to Wales and worked atAberystwyth University, teaching art for special schools. Ireturned to London after two years and started working onthe Art Therapy Course as a Lecturer and then CourseLeader at St. Albans. I was lucky to be part of an excitingtime at the Art College working together with JoySchaverien and Tessa Dalley and a group of us formed awriting group which produced Images of Art Therapy. TessaDalley and I went on to collaborate on The Handbook of ArtTherapy and Working with Children in Art Therapy. Whileteaching on the Art Therapy Course I also worked clinicallyin the Inner London Education Authority running ArtTherapy Groups for children with short term special needsin mainstream education.

    I moved from London to Scotland where I trained inChild Psychotherapy in Edinburgh. I worked clinically as anArt Therapist at a charity called Barnardos at a projectwhich tries to keep very disturbed children with their fami-lies rather than sending them to boarding schools. The proj-ect is part education, part social services. There is familywork and support, running alongside individual work withthe children and a school especially for these children. Ialso worked at a child and young peoples project inEdinburgh. My book Imagining Animals: art, psychothera-py and primitive states of mind is partly based on this work,on children who are hard to reach or to make contact.

    In 2000 I moved to Bristol where I am presently based.I work in a Child and Family Mental Health Service in the

    National Health Service. I see some children for individualwork as well as work with the whole family. I do quite a lotof work supervising many different kinds of therapists whowork with children and families. While I have been inBristol I have worked on Art Therapy with Children: frominfancy to adolescence ; and, Supervising ArtPsychotherapy: a theoretical and practical handbook.

    This year although I am still writing articles, aboutworking with trauma, I am hoping to spend gradually moretime on my own art work. I studied sculpture and dance atcollege in my first training but now I like to paint and alsoenjoy etching. I am a member of a group of art therapistswho aim to have an exhibition in Bristol next year. My otherfavourite activity is gardening, flowers and vegetables. Weare lucky to live outside Bristol near the country so enjoywalks with our dog, who is half Saluki and half Greyhound.I have two step-children who are grown-up and one daugh-ter who is at university.

    We are very much looking forward to visiting Taiwan.We have heard a lot about the wonders of the NationalPalace Museum, but were lucky to see an exhibition ofContemporary Chinese Painting in Scotland some years agowhich included works from Taiwan, Wu Tien-Chang andothers so we hope to see some modern art too. We both likeChinese food, I am vegetarian but eat some seafood too andI believe you have many Buddhist restaurants. I want verymuch to see your beautiful country, gardens, and templesbut most of all look forward to meeting fellow art therapists.

    Caroline Case

  • 81973 St. AlbansHertfordshire

    Birmingham

    Aberystwyth

    St. AlbansJoy Schaverien

    Tessa Dalley

    Tessa Dalley

    Barnardos

    2000NHS

    Person-centered Trans-per-sonal

    32

    Caroline Case

    2009 01 15