Arts Therapies in International Practice: Informed by Neuroscience and Research

Author(s): Edited by Caroline Miller & Mariana Torkington

Art & Creative Therapies

Arts Therapies in International Practice: Informed by Neuroscience and Research brings together practice and research in the arts therapies and in neuroscience. The authors are all arts therapists who have reviewed their practice through the lens of modern neuroscience.



  • Captures a snapshot of current international arts therapies practice, from Australasia, South East Asia, United Kingdom and the US.

  • Demonstrates the benefits of arts therapies for clients who have experienced trauma, as well as those with acquired neurological conditions, atypical neurological development, anxiety and depression.

  • Links to neurological research, particularly with trauma, acquired neurological disorders, and non-typical neurological development.


An essential resource for practicing arts therapists, as well as students and educators in postgraduate arts therapy courses. Arts Therapies in International Practice brings together practice and research in the arts therapies and in neuroscience. The authors are all arts therapists who have reviewed their practice through the lens of modern neuroscience. Neuroscience confirms the importance of embodiment, choice, and creativity in therapy with a range of clients. Arts therapies directly provide these. The authors demonstrate how the arts therapies can be adapted creatively to work in different social and ethnic communities, with different ages and with different states of health or ill health. Although there is diversity in their practice and country of practice, they reaffirm key concepts of the arts therapies, such as the importance of the therapeutic relationship, and the key role played by the arts modality with its effects on the brain and nervous system.


This book will appeal to a wide readership, including arts therapists, expressive arts therapists, a range of other psychotherapists and counsellors, students and their teachers, and those interested in the neuroscience of human development.

$59.00 NZD

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"The development in thinking and practice of neuroscience is exciting for a number of reasons, not the least because of its impact on the arts therapies. This book contains a treasure trove of writing encompassing the work of a variety of creative arts practitioners and is inspiring and uplifting. Music, art, movement and drama are combined in this unique text exploring the benefits of creative therapeutic work for a wide range of clients. The book also provides an opportunity to hear different voices from the global practices of these creative therapists, adding much to the discourse and practice development for colleagues in a variety of fields as well as students and those with lived-experience of the life-issues presented here." --Dr Elizabeth Coombes FHEA FAMI. Therapydd Cerdd/Music Therapist, Uwch Ddarlithydd/Senior Lecturer, Arweinydd Rhaglen MA mewn Therapi Cerdd/Programme Leader MA Music Therapy, Rhoelwr Academaidd/Academic Manager, Prifysgol De Cymru/University of South Wales

"The arts therapies are uniquely positioned to contribute significantly to the practical and experiential applications of recent developments in neuroscience to mental health. Arts therapists have long practiced with a deep understanding of the connection between mind and body. This volume is an eloquent contribution to this field and ensures that the experience and understanding of the arts therapists is heard and included. It is especially exciting to hear the stories and experiences of arts therapists who bring their experience from beyond the global north." --Paula Kingwill, Dramatherapist, HPCSA reg. South Africa

"An extraordinary culmination of innovative and captivating practice and insights from a diverse cross-section of international arts therapies practitioners and contexts. Each chapter sensitively considers the complexities of neuroscience, how emerging research is stimulating engagement with the arts and creativity across the lifespan, and how these implications are impacting informed practice. Those receiving arts therapies services remain the focal point and it is their engagement with the creative processes that breathe life into the discourse. Caroline Miller has again contributed a critical and sophisticated text that interweaves theory, research and neuroscience that is sure to ignite your imagination and progress the arts therapies in important ways." --Ronald P.M.H. Lay, MA, AThR, ATR-BC, registered and credentialed art therapist, consultant, supervisor and program leader of the Masters in Art Therapy Program at LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore

Caroline Miller, (NZ) MA Clinical Psychology, PGDip Clinical Psychology, BA English/Psychology, BPhil, PG Dip. Dramatherapy, graduated as a dramatherapist in 1991 and has worked as a dramatherapist and clinical psychologist in government services, non-government services, schools, mental health settings, and private practice. Her work has included school counselling, managing and setting up a district health board mental health service for children adolescents and their families, managing a programme for conduct disordered youth, working in schools for children (ages 5-21) with special needs, working with young sex offenders, and working in private practice with adults and young people with sexual abuse trauma, depression, anxiety, and other diagnosed mental health disorders. She has had an extensive supervision practice. She has supported many therapists to develop their writing for publication. Caroline was the inaugural co-director of the MA in arts therapy, a combined arts therapies programme at Whitecliffe College of Arts and Design in Auckland New Zealand. She continued in the position of co-director teaching and supervising master's level dissertations. This was followed by guest lecturing and workshop invitations. She has presented at several conferences in Australasia and the United Kingdom. Caroline has published several articles and is the editor of two books Assessment and Outcomes in the Arts Therapies and Arts Therapists in Multidisciplinary Settings


Mariana Torkington, (NZ) MA Arts Therapy (Clinical), AThR, ANZACATA, MNZAC, ACC Provider, is a registered arts therapist working and lecturing in Auckland and a published author in the arts therapies field. Mariana has worked as an arts therapist for government and non-government agencies and in private practice. She has specialised in working with children, adolescents and families in trauma and abuse recovery. Her special areas of interest include family work, learning disabilities, anxiety, and depression. Mariana is currently lecturing in the newly established Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Programme at Auckland University of Technology. Mariana spent her childhood and young adulthood living in Argentina and Brazil and speaks Spanish, Portuguese, and English.

General Fields

  • : 9780367536886
  • : Taylor & Francis
  • : 01 December 2021
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Edited by Caroline Miller & Mariana Torkington