Posts in Vol 5 / Issue 1
President's Message

Amanda Gee (Lower Sackville, NS)

I have lately been thinking and talking a lot about self-care, and the practice of self-care. It really is something to be practised. In the helping professions we give and give, see a need, and give some more. The focus is on the wellbeing of others. Recently while encouraging others, I have been trying to also encourage myself, to take the time to ‘practise’ self-care.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
Editor's Note

Sarah Gysin (Ottawa, ON)

The language of becoming expresses the possibility of change and growth, and while this is often a term used for the way we speak with our children, I believe it is also a wonderful way to view our own possibility for change and growth as individuals and practitioners.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
Drama Therapy: Interview with Rowena Tam

Art Therapy Conversations
Rebecca Montgomery (Vancouver, BC)

Rowena Tam, MA, C.C.C., is a drama therapist, researcher, and guest living and working in Tiohtiá:ke/Mooniyaang/Montreal, on unceded Kanien’kehá:ka territory. Rowena is the past-president of the CCPA’s Creative Arts in Counselling and Psychotherapy Chapter. Rowena met with Rebecca to share about her therapeutic and artistic practice, and her recent seminar with the CCPA, “Against cop sh*t in the creative arts therapies”.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
Stories from the Compost

Patricia Ki (Toronto, ON)

Inspired by a workshop on painting with food offered by Dr. Fyre Jean Graveline at the 2021 CATA Conference, I started looking into art making with plants; particularly, plant parts that are left behind and going to the compost.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
D’écran à écran: un nouveau cadre art-thérapeutique

Emmanuelle Cesari (Paris, France) & Mikaël Clain (La Réunion, France)

Alors que la maladie à Coronavirus pèse sur la santé mentale de la population, l’art-thérapie saisit l’opportunité de développer de nouvelles pratiques. Notre objectif principal est d’inviter des participants à un atelier expérientiel numérique individuel d’e‑art‑thérapie pour déposer leur anxiété sur un support créatif et la mettre à distance.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
The Knowing of Trees

Nature’s Way
Taylor Bourassa (Ottawa, ON)

Nature’s Way is a regular column in Envisage that explores eco-art therapy and invites practices of enhancing our relationship with the earth. In this issue, Envisage writer Taylor Bourassa explores the knowledge we can learn from trees in the winter.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
The Frozen Crystalline State of Ambiguity

Nina Pariser (Montreal, QC)

I did my final year of training as an art therapist during the COVID-19 pandemic. While I was completing my final research for the art therapy program at Concordia University, I engaged with rituals and art practices that helped me to connect to my grandparents’ ways of creating meaning during their own difficult times.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin
The Hermit: Nature as a Container

Jess Winnicki-Reinsch (Winnipeg, MB)

Our inner landscape can be mirrored by the outer environment we place ourselves in. We can find a circular connection: the individual connecting to nature, the individual creating with natural materials, moving back to the individual and their own process. Spending time in nature and creating in nature can be a support for our mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual wellbeing.

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Vol 5 / Issue 1Sarah Gysin