Send A Free E-Mail Card
Just a little hint: Alex has prepared email postcards that you can send to friends and family for FREE. Click an image below to send a card today.
Art Therapy (3)
Art therapy creates new hues in Autism Awareness Month
Written by Eleanor Perry-Smith, Medhill, Northwestern University, ChicagoApril is Autism Awareness Month and aims to speak up for people who have the disability. While public awareness is necessary and helpful, how can it help people, especially children with autism alleviate their frustration? Many families are learning about art therapy as an outlet for kids with autism to speak in other ways.
“Art can provide a way to express what is more complicated,” said Nicole Martin, an art therapist who received her training in Chicago. She said she hopes Autism Awareness Month will inform families that there are resources for children with autism, and art therapy could be the right fit for their child.
“Art tends to play to their natural strengths and interests,” said Martin. “They are very visual-spatial and sensory oriented.”
To read the full article, please click the following link: http://www.arttherapyblog.com/autism/art-therapy-autism-creating-new-hues/#more-60
Artist With Autism Draws Entire City From Memory
Written by Administrator
Stephen Wiltshire was mute and diagnosed with autism at the age of three. His dad died the same year. When he was 5, he moved to London where his interest in drawing began and eventually blossomed. Wiltshire slowly began talking when he was about 9 years old.
Wiltshire (pictured left) continued drawing and would eventually be the subject of various documentaries, television shows, books, and even come out with 4 books of his own…including one that made the Sunday Times best-seller list.
This one-hour documentary provides a window into revealing moments of he kids’ private lives – combined with interviews with their families – as they learn to express themselves through films, poems, painting and music.
Recent research – as well as testimonials from parents of the campers – indicates that developing the creative and acting abilities of autisti children significantly improves their communication and socialization skills, something that is frequently overlooked as a therapeutic tool.
Art Therapy