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1.Mentalizing
2.Mentalizing-Based Art Therapy
3.Menninger, Art Therapy, and the Compass Program
4.Emerging Adulthood, Mentalizing, and Art Therapy
5.Mentalizing-Based Art Therapy Group
6.Mentalizing Self, Others & Relationships
7.Mentalizing the Mind
8.Mentalizing about Treatment and Beyond
9.Life of the Image
How art therapy can be used to promote mentalizing in emerging adults in a clinical setting
Kula Moore, ATR-BC, LPC, CPRP is an art therapist
and licensed professional counselor in Houston, TX. She practices
art therapy as a senior psychiatric rehabilitation specialist at
The Menninger Clinic and is the founder of Art Therapy Houston.
Kate Marder, ATR-BC, LPC, CPRP is an art therapist
and licensed professional counselor. She lives in Houston, TX where
she practices art therapy at Houston Methodist Behavioral Health
and Art Therapy Houston.
I enthusiastically recommend this ground-breaking book. A sound
foundation in mentalization principles is followed by details of
practice innovations which coherently extend art therapy within the
MBT model. Clear descriptions of the approach are supported by
vivid testimony from the young adults who used art therapy. Much to
value here for art therapists working with a range of client
groups.
*Dr Neil Springham, consultant practice-research art therapist
Oxleas NHS Trust, lead for psychological therapies and MBT services
(Bromley), previously chair of British Association of Art
Therapists*
Mentalizing theory has finally found a therapeutic application for
client groups that it has not been able to reach in words alone.
This is the best practical guide for a clinical application that
will, I hope, generate practical support not just for our
therapists but all practitioners willing to step outside the frame
of their traditional boundaries. Everyone has much to learn from
this excellent book.
*Professor Peter Fonagy, OBE FMedSci FBA FAcSS PhD DipPsy, Head of
the Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, UCL, and Chief
Executive, Anna Freud National Centre for Children & Families*
This book is a gem. These talented clinicians and excellent writers
contribute substantially to their field by explicating a richly
psychotherapeutic approach to patients' expressive artwork. The
book is expertly curated with clinical examples and concrete
guidelines for structuring groups, all framed in a lucid
articulation of the mentalizing approach to treatment.
*Jon G. Allen, PhD, Baylor College of Medicine and The Menninger
Clinic*
Reading about theory-informed practice of mentalizing art therapy
couldn't be any easier. Mentalizing in Group Art Therapy is a much
needed text that provides clear theory and practice of mentalizing
in art therapy. The chapters build upon defining theory that leaves
the reader with a sense of readiness to practice. Furthermore, the
clearly illustrated examples of dialogue among clients, therapists,
and artwork illuminate the practice of mentalizing in action. This
book is a must for art therapists to self-reflect on their practice
and hone their skills.
*Megan Robb, ATR-BC, LPC, NCC, Director of the Art Therapy
Counseling Graduate Program, Associate Professor in Art Therapy
Counseling, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville*
Kula and Kate describe their exploration about the solid worth
Mentalizing Based Art Therapy can bring. They provide art
therapists and colleagues with a 'compass' to the MBAT. They
describe several interventions and group discussions concerning how
the process of making a tangible artwork can enhance mentalizing. A
lovely hopeful book about youngsters in a tumultuous and critical
stage of life.
*Marianne Verfaille, art therapist, registered MBT–specialised
therapist, and author of ‘Mentalizing in Arts Therapies’*
Moore and Marder bring the power of art therapy, with a mentalizing
approach, to emerging adult groups, in order to gain personal
insight into self, and empathy towards others. This book is a must
for anyone working with emerging adults. The interventions are
innovative and easy to incorporate into your own personal practice.
I plan to bring this information to my students so they can best
serve the this unique population.
*Deborah Elkis-Abuhoff, PhD., LCAT, ATR-BC, ATCS, Associate
Professor and Program Director, Hofstra University Creative Arts
Therapy Counseling*
Authors Moore and Marder have taken art therapy to a whole new
level with the addition of the concept of Mentalizing. Here the
authors demonstrate their work with patients through explication of
Mentalizing processes along with case examples of how to work with
artistic metaphors to produce growth in self-understanding. This is
a particularly valuable new volume in group mental health
treatment.
*Flynn O’Malley, PhD, ABPP Senior Psychologist, The Menninger
Clinic; Associate Professor, Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas*
Moore and Marder have authored a marvelous introduction to
mentalizing in art therapy - not only well written, but also
understandable. This is no small feat, because even though
mentalizing is theoretically simple, it is also complex. My thanks
to Kula and Kate for this fine gift to our field!
*Judith A. Rubin, PhD, ATR-BC, HLM, Editor, Approaches to Art
Therapy*
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