Publication year: 2011
Source: The Arts in Psychotherapy, Available online 20 October 2011
Sharon Snir, Tamar Hazut
This study documents the main pictorial phenomena expressed in joint paintings by romantically involved couples, and attempts to define the principal elements of the “pictorial language” that individuals use to express the relationship between them. The study applies methods of inquiry that were developed for the purpose of therapy and evaluation, based on the phenomenological approach to nonclinical populations.In a qualitative examination of the paintings, 13 thematic categories were identified and used to examine expressions of the couple relationship in their joint paintings: suggestions for cooperation/non-cooperation, reactions to suggested cooperation/non-cooperation, relating to images made by the partner, distance between the partners in the painting, contact between the marks of the two partners, occupation of areas, similarity/difference between the painting styles of the participants, connection/separation between images, coherence of the resulting product, symbolism of style, images in the painting that are significant to understanding the relationship, behavior in the course of the painting process, and transitions between the paintingsTwo case studies are presented to demonstrate how such analysis may help art therapists, marriage counselors, and family therapists evaluate and understand couple relationships by effectively revealing their conflicts and significant needs as expressed in their joint paintings
Highlights
► Documentation of the central pictorial phenomena in couples’ joint paintings. ► Definition of the principal elements of the language of joint relational paintings. ► Systematic examination of pictorial phenomena in a large number of joint paintings.