ABSTRACT
This paper describes a pilot of art psychotherapy groups using a dyadic approach as an intervention for parents and infants in order to improve their relationships. The pilot was developed as a collaboration between an Art Psychotherapist and a Developmental Psychologist. It sought to use standardised measures of parental well-being and object relations as well as developing an observational tool that could be applied to video footage of groups to measure change in the duration of attachment behaviours across the span of the intervention. The paper demonstrates a positive change within the dyads’ relationships and the viability of evaluating groups using these measures. It will describe the process of developing the observational tool and argue for the next steps to be taken.
Plain-language summary
We are researching whether making art together in an art therapy group might help improve the bonding between parents and their young children. The experiences we have with our caregivers in the first years of life are crucial for our well-being for the rest of our lives. It makes a difference to have a caregiver who is emotionally available and who is responsive. We think that when infants and their parents make art together it encourages lots of positive behaviours between them that can help to improve the way they relate to each other – their attachment. Art encourages lots of joint looking and shared sensory experiences which can help them to communicate better and, importantly, to have fun together and enjoy each other’s company. Our research looked at an Art Therapy approach where a group of parents and infants did art and messy play together for 12 weeks with the support of a qualified art psychotherapist. We showed that there were improvements in the well-being of parents and in the way they viewed their relationships following the art therapy group and the change in well-being was statistically significant. We also measured the length of time each parent–infant pair spent engaged in behaviour that would be seen as positive for attachments and saw that this increased from the first to last session. This is really promising pilot evidence that Art Therapy might be a useful tool to help with struggling parents and their very young children.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank our clinical supervisor for the groups, Rosie Howatson, for all her advice, Mel Hunter who co-facilitated the groups for her help, and all the mums and their children who took part for engaging in the groups and trusting us to use their data.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes on contributors
Victoria Gray Armstrong is an art psychotherapist who has been working with children and families for over 10 years. She is currently a postgraduate researcher in Psychology at Dundee University seeking to evaluate the efficacy of art therapy groups for parents and infants. Together with Dr Josephine Ross she founded the Art at the Start project.
Dr Josephine Ross is an experimental psychologist at Dundee University with an interest in early development and the impact of shared art experiences.
Egle Dalinkeviciute is a psychology graduate who worked on the project as a researcher.
ORCID
Victoria Gray Armstrong http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6332-2849