Community

Good Art: Bad City

Good Art: Bad City

By Liz DelliCarpini | February 22, 2018 | Children | Community

In an effort to strengthen the interpersonal and institutional resources available for youth involved in the juvenile justice system, School of Visual Arts’ (SVA) MPS in Art Therapy program has formed a partnership with Artistic Noise, an independent nonprofit that “exists to bring the freedom and power of artistic practice to young people who are incarcerated, on probation, or otherwise involved in the justice system” (“Artistic Noise,” 2018).

SoCalATA Honors Lauryn Hunter: Art Therapist Helps Standing Rock Children and Families

SoCalATA Honors Lauryn Hunter: Art Therapist Helps Standing Rock Children and Families

By Teresa Grame | February 23, 2017 | Community

The Southern California Art Therapy Association (SoCalATA) was honored to present Lauryn Hunter, LMFT, ATR with the Art Therapy Distinguished Service Award at our Annual General meeting held on February 4, 2017. The award recognized Lauryn for her important role in responding to the needs of the children and families of the water protectors at Standing Rock in North Dakota, in addition to her work in the local schools of Los Angeles.

Bringing Art to Life through Storytelling

Bringing Art to Life through Storytelling

By Sarah Margaret Wade | April 27, 2016 | About Art Therapy | Community | #WeAreArtTherapists

I recently attended a celebratory gala and art show at the University of Alabama to honor five years of Art to Life, a program of art therapy and storytelling for adults diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and other cognitive disorders. Art to Life is a course sponsored by University of Alabama’s Honors College in collaboration with the Cognitive Dynamics Foundation in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Art Therapy and Social Justice at Chicago-based Women’s Shelter

Art Therapy and Social Justice at Chicago-based Women’s Shelter

By Sangeetha Ravichandran | December 9, 2015 | About Art Therapy | Community | Trauma

ApnaGhar, Inc., (“Our Home” in Urdu/Hindi,) provides holistic services, education, and advocacy across immigrant communities to end the different manifestations of gender violence. Gender violence can be broadly understood as violence impacting women and girls who are part of various margins of society. They are denied access, rights, and privileges and are stripped of personal power through forms of control exerted by an individual, a group, and/or systems of oppression, including domestic and family violence, forced marriage, trafficking, and honor killings. At Apna Ghar, we address issues of gender violence using a client-centered, trauma -focused, and empowerment-based approach.

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