Psychological Perspectives A Quarterly Journal of Jungian Thought ISSN: 0033-2925 (Print) 1556-3030 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/upyp20 C. G. Jung’s Influence on Art Therapy and the Making of the Third Nora Swan-Foster To cite this article: Nora Swan-Foster (2020) C. G. Jung’s Influence on Art Therapy and the Making of the Third, Psychological Perspectives, 63:1, 67-94, DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2020.1739467 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/00332925.2020.1739467 Published online: 18 Jun 2020. Submit your article to this journal View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=upyp20 Psychological Perspectives, 63: 67–94, 2020 # C. G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles ISSN: 0033-2925 print / 1556-3030 online DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2020.1739467 C. G. Jung’s Influence on Art Therapy and the Making of the Third Nora Swan-Foster Art therapy and the image are active approaches to address the analytic third, an idea that was mentioned by C. G. Jung in the Psychology of the Transference, but was first experienced by him as described in The Red Book (2009). Jung’s artmaking was an impressive lifelong affair that relied upon mixed media, making it reasonable for us to consider Jung as the father of art therapy. Prior to the 1913 publication of Symbols of Transformation, Jung visited America for a second time; on this visit, the Jungian analyst Beatrice Hinkle introduced Jung to the Greenwich crowd. Among the noteworthy artists and activists were Margaret Naumburg and Florence Cane, who later established the field of art therapy in the United States. Despite the tension created from the Freud–Jung split, Naumburg and Cane were deeply influenced by Jung’s theoretical ideas, initially via Hinkle, with whom they analyzed for three years. Requiring a safe passage for the birth of art therapy, Naumburg navigated an independent third way, but drew from many of Jung’s already established ideas to formulate her research and educational approach. Because the historical details surrounding the development of art therapy in America are being stitched back into an art therapy education, Jung’s early clinical insights regarding specific theoretical ideas gain visibility and respect. This overview acknowledges that analytical psychology remains a powerful and integral building block in the field of art therapy and offers relevant resources for theoretical and clinical formulations when working as an art therapist. ore often than not, analytical psychology and Jung’s work are extracurricular affairs that people seek out because of their various encounters with the living psyche, but fail to find because of Jung’s relationship with Freud and the predominance of ego work within mainstream art therapy. For those of us immersed in Jung’s work, we accept that we may live on the edges of the collective because of our relationship with the unconscious and our various notions of how images and symbols heal the psyche. Several years ago, the art therapist and Jungian analyst Michael Edwards (1987) articulated the residual shadow within the education system when he pointed out that most art therapy students are caught in the original traumatic archetypal split that occurred between Jung and Freud, because they are typically taught by professors who carry an inherited unconscious or conscious negative theoretical bias toward Jung that is passed down to their students. The M A version of this article was first presented at the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts meeting in April 2019. 68 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 Margaret Nielsen, Airborne, oil on canvas, 24 30 in., 1990. NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 69 intergenerational message might be that Freudian/post-Freudian methodologies are clinically more robust and preferred, whereas Jungian methods are considered secondary or lack empirical evidence and clinical relevance. What I recognize now that I could not know as a young art therapy student is that analytical psychology can both demonstrate clinical evidence of change and offer a profound way to live one’s life. Perhaps more so now than ever before, Jung’s methods demand that even if we are not artists, we cultivate an attitude toward the psychospiritual experiences rooted in the healing power of the symbol and the image. Although I have experienced the images as living entities that spoke to me in various ways throughout my life, this was not the usual academic focus. Jung’s structure of the psyche remained a mystery in graduate school. My professors happened to emphasize Freudian-oriented perspectives or other spin-off theoretical models. Fortunately, at the time, I chose to enter Jungian analysis with an art therapist. This decision set the trajectory for many professional years of diverse theoretical explorations that led to an unanticipated straddling of the tension between what felt like two land masses of clinical thought, divided by fierce political and personal biases. Without an adequate foundation beneath me, I was not always ready to respond to those transmissions of collective stories and concretized concepts that had prevailed from the original painful separation between Freud and Jung in 1913. These early misrepresentations and misunderstandings of Jung, explained by Edwards (1987), led to my analytic training and eventually my writing Jungian Art Therapy, a book which focused on educating art therapy students and interested faculty. Further, by teaching a graduate-level transpersonal art therapy course, I could introduce Jung’s model of the psyche and open the door for students interested in analytical psychology and its intersection with art therapy. Because I had visual learners in mind, I used various spontaneous images in my book to illustrate Jung’s ideas and concepts. The metaphor of circumambulation was a pedagogical structure to encourage confidence as we spiraled around Jung’s basic concepts.1 Clinical vignettes and examples from the collective were used to further amplify his ideas. The focal point was that students were required to engage with and experience the dynamic nature of their psyche through the creation of their own “Red Books.” The students reflected upon where their inner process intersected with Jung’s theory, and the images offered concrete support. It was essential that the end result was not graded. This gave them plenty of freedom for personal exploration and process without the haunting goal of competition or a perfect end product that is approved by the hierarchical critique from an outsider (professor). Most importantly, I wanted them to know that Jungian psychology is not just a theory but also an attitude they hold toward their inner life, a realm that is greatly felt through personal story and images so it can be embodied and eventually carried back into daily life. What they came to understand was that Jung valued the creative drive over the more Freudian ideas on repression (van den Berk, 2012). As you might expect, art therapy students were exceptionally creative with their “Red Book” process (see Figure 1). Some altered books, others sewed a book, while others used simple sketchbooks as a place for their chosen weekly disciplines of working with psyche–soma. Some recorded dreams or visions followed by a response image, others used a weekly mandala, investigated symbols, or incorporated specific yoga positions with image-making responses. Whatever they chose, the committed discipline of contemplation and reflection stirred the complexes and highlighted archetypal patterns. They were encouraged to track the progressions and regressions of psychic energy that revealed the ego’s habitual relationship to compulsive thoughts. Each student tracked 70 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 FIGURE 1. Selected “Red Books” made by art therapy students. the canalization of psychic energy as a felt experience that could be transformed into an image. In this transpersonal psychology course I introduced the influence of William James on Jung’s development as related to the religious psyche, particularly as James was credited with the use of the word transpersonal in his first Harvard lectures in 1905. Absent from Memories, Dreams, Reflections (MDR) was how James’s original work on defining the spiritual or religious aspect of the psyche was profoundly meaningful and highly influential to Jung’s professional and personal development and understanding of the psyche (Shamdasani, 1999). Studying his own emotional experiences of depression, James determined that the transpersonal psychological state had four specific qualities: noetic, transient, ineffable, and autonomous (James, 1902/1912). Obviously, Jung was encouraged by James’s clarifications and how his method of taking refuge in his contemplative practice abated his depression. Such results impressed Jung, and he would soon commit to one of his own methods: that of picture-making. THREE KEY POINTS OF JUNG’S INFLUENCE In the background of this article that explores Jung’s influence on the development of art therapy, there are three key points that are particularly relevant for Jungian art therapy. First, in 1916 Jung identified and named the transcendent function, although it was not published until 1958 (and then later, in Jung, 1972). The fact that Jung was stretching to articulate and conceptualize this invisible psychic process in psychological terms is absolutely pivotal for art therapists. The transcendent function provides not only an imagination for the teleological structure and creative NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 71 process, but also a structural explanation for how psychic energy lowers into the unconscious to constellate and move from being implicit raw psyche–soma energy to an image outside of the body (Chodorow, 1997). “This lowering of energy can be seen most clearly before the onset of certain psychoses and also in the empty stillness which precedes creative work” (Jung, 1985, par. 373). In fact, the notion that the transcendent function channels invisible psychic energy into a visible and knowable forms and images precedes and supports Bollas’s more recent term of the “unthought known” (Bollas, 1989, p. 4), wherein something is known but not yet thought, and in this case, is nonverbal but often visual in the broadest sense of the word. Jung attributed the transcendent function to the unconscious autonomous nature of psychic energy and complexes with their archetypal core. Art therapists do not hold a consensus on how this works but may draw upon neuropsychology talk about presymbolic, preconscious, or unconscious material moving through arms and out the hands (integrating heart and mind). Much of art therapy theory is ego-oriented. Many do not know that it was Jung who first said that it is necessary to clarify vague content from the unconscious by “giving it a visible form. This can be done by drawing, painting, or modeling. Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain” (Jung, 1972, par. 180). Thus, the unconscious has a critical influence on egoic material and attitude. Schaverien (1992) used the term “embodied images” because they are more than signs and carry greater depth with the potential for a meaningful engagement. Essentially, the transcendent function as a key concept responds to the questions from art therapy students who already trust the power of the image, but are required to drill into the enigmatic for art therapy theory and praxis. Second, in 1912 Jung considered James’s differentiation of tender-minded and tough-minded with his essay “Two Kinds of Thinking” (Jung, 1967), which was eventually followed by naming his method of active imagination. Along with affirming the role of psychic energy, Jung emphasized the value of working with the opposites and the dialectical bridge that can be built between the conscious and the unconscious through, in his terms, directed and nondirected thinking. Finally, Jung experimented and engaged with a wide variety of materials and took the time to make his own images—this is an important prerequisite and subsequent requirement for an art therapist in training. It is also vital for those who are actively encouraging patients to make pictures or work with imagery in their consulting rooms. In other words, if we ask our analysands to make images or art from their visions and dreams, we also need to be working with our own visions and dreams through the making of our own images. It is the only way that we can have a felt experience of the construction, deconstruction, and rebuilding process that lines the path toward the final image. And so, with the publication of The Red Book in 2009, we can no longer overlook the fact that because Jung was actively engaged in his creative process, it had theoretical and clinical implications that remain plentiful, identifying him very specifically as the father of art therapy and the expressive arts therapies overall (Swan-Foster, 2018). Clearly, Jung was deeply informed by the spontaneous arrival of the third thing that made itself visible through the images he created, as well as those made by his analysands. This unexpected material that he intimately experienced and valued from this creative psychical process permeated his thoughts, influenced his writing, and paved the way for art therapy as a separate psychological profession. 72 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 FIGURE 2. Jung, Atmavictu, 1920, shell-limestone, Stiftung C. G. Jung Kusnacht (441=16 61=8 61=2 in). Reprinted from The Art of C. G. Jung. Copyright # 2019 The Foundation for the Works of C. G. Jung. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. WHAT MADE JUNG THE FATHER OF ART THERAPY? Jung recognized that his early experiences of imagination and creativity were an important part of working with the unconscious and healing the psyche. Throughout his life stone was perhaps one of the most important mediums for Jung—in MDR he refers to it as a medium that allowed him to find his foundation or “footing.” One of his memories while sitting on a stone was of pondering the relationship between subject and object that led to his question: “Am I the one who is sitting on the stone, or am I the stone on which he is sitting?” (Jung, 1961, p. 20). And then there is the account of his “secret” in the attic: the pencil case where he stored a personal black stone from the Rhine, along with the little manikin he had made from his ruler, dressed in a top hat and wool coat. As a 10-year-old anticipating the threshold into a new developmental phase, his manikin was a comfort until it lost its psychic energy. Art therapy often emphasizes the role of such spontaneous ritual objects or images as “anchoring NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 73 objects,” “talismans,” (Schaverien, 1992), “transitional objects,” or “spirit guides” that can be a comfort, carrying and documenting what is treasured or disavowed. The images express the transpersonal nature of the psyche, which includes the enigmatic, inexpressible, as well as the dark, chthonic life force of the unconscious that brings to light the other. As we know, Jung’s reliance on stone expanded from the small black stone to Atmavictu (a figure that appeared to Jung as the ‘breath of life’ or the creative impulse), and the large stones used to build his tower: Words and paper did not seem real enough to me. To put my fantasies on solid footing, something more was needed. I had to achieve a kind of representation in stone of my innermost thoughts and of the knowledge I had acquired … . I had to make a confession of faith in stone. That was the beginning of the tower, the house I built for myself at Bollingen. (Jung, 1961, p. 223) Carving stone requires patience and focus (Figure 2). It’s also a medium that demands a certain amount of physical strength and engagement so that the stone will speak and be heard by the carver, thereby liberating the image of spirit (Swan-Foster, 2018). Shortly after Jung’s wife Emma’s death, he relied on carving in stone as a way to work with his devastating grief. In a letter to his daughter Marianne, he wrote that the stone he was working on offered a sense of “inner stability with its hardness and permanence, and its meaning governs my thoughts” (Clay, 2016, p. 342). Jung’s commitment to tending to his own nature, to an instinctive wisdom, as well as a reliance on his inherent psychospiritual qualities was illustrated through his stone carving. From an art therapy perspective, the material offered him a place to physically wrestle with his suffering. The stone was resilient to the intensity of grief brought about by the death of Emma, who had been Jung’s constant rock and foundation. Further, the stone offered emotional containment while documenting his relationship with his inner world. Mellick (2019b) summarizes that “Stone shaped Jung’s creativity as much as his creativity shaped the stone” (p. 366). €lzli, Jung also was a painter. While in medical school and then at the Burgho Jung’s creative work illustrated pastoral scenes with vistas, mountains, trees, and pathways. The light, in some of his early paintings, depicted not just the beauty of the countryside, but also the liminal moments between night and day. When in Paris, Jung spent many hours visiting museums and painting his views of nature (Figures 3, 4), which renewed his soul. While at the Burgh€ olzli, he said: In my isolated, work-filled life [I have] an indescribable need for the beautiful and the elevated; if I have before me the whole day long the work of the destruction of the psyche and body and have to immerse myself in all sorts of painful feelings, have tried to penetrate often abominable and tortured thought processes, I need in the evening something from the highest level of nature. (Fischer & Kaufmann, 2019, p. 20) Jung also worked on refining his perspective through creating pencil drawings of villages, buildings, and castles without much use of color. In particular, there are several drawings of his K€ usnacht home that illustrated the gradual development of his drawing skills, including his ability to catch the correct perspective (Figure 5). These various visual works can be found in Fischer and Kaufmann (2019). During this early professional period, the contrast between Jung’s sensitive depictions of nature, with its changing light and color, and his skill of depicting physical 74 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 FIGURE 3. Jung, Country Road with Trees, 1902, Watercolor on paper. Jung Family Archive 51=2 87=16 in). Reprinted from The Art of C. G. Jung. Copyright # 2019 The Foundation for the Works of C. G. Jung. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. FIGURE 4. Jung, Forest with Small Pond, 1902, Watercolor and graphite on paper. Jung Family Archive (51=2 81=2 in). Reprinted from The Art of C. G. Jung. Copyright # 2019 The Foundation for the Works of C. G. Jung. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. structures such as castles or buildings were occasionally combined (Figure 6). The integration may reflect his growing awareness of the tension between personality one and two, the conscious and the unconscious, and perhaps his attempts to hold two compatible but contrasting points of view within psychology (subjective and objective). The integration of buildings into pastoral scenes may also illustrate Jung’s interest in NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 75 FIGURE 5. Jung, Southeast Façade, 1907, Graphite on paper, Jung Family Archive (33=4 45=16 ). Reprinted from The Art of C. G. Jung. Copyright # 2019 The Foundation for the Works of C. G. Jung. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. human nature and how humans interface with nature as an internal and external experience, and then find their own true nature. Also, the idea of the opposites is visible in Jung’s paintings through his use of warm and cool colors or his tendency to fill space while other small areas are left unfinished as negative space. He would experience “again and again, the mysterious place between imagination and expression. He was creating a space in which the numinous could be” (Mellick, 2019, p. 397). 76 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 FIGURE 6. Jung, Landscape with Castle, 1900, Pastel on paper, Jung Family Archive (12 143=8 inches). Reprinted from The Art of C. G. Jung. Copyright # 2019 The Foundation for the Works of C. G. Jung. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. The year following his meeting with William James, Jung was invited back to the United States for a rigorous lecture schedule that included the New York Psychiatric Institute and Fordham University. There was great interest in the results from Jung’s word association experiment and his pioneering ideas on stagnation and regression as “the basic donation for the act of creation” (1967, p. 180). During the same visit, the New York Times published an interview with Jung believed to be written by Charlotte Teller (Sherry, 2015). It was the first public article that acknowledged psychoanalysis in the United States and verified that Jung was, at this point in history, the one who was highly sought after, not Freud (Shamdasani, 2012). But this did not last long, for upon his return, Symbols of Transformation was published in 1912/1913 and Jung faced the “confrontation with the unconscious” that led to his own withdrawal and his simultaneous rejection by the psychoanalytic community in Vienna. Up to this point, Jung's public life had been extraverted, successful, and powerfully heroic (Shamdasani, 2009) and so after the separation from Freud (Swan-Foster, 2018), he committed himself to a rigorous and exhausting schedule of personal research on the unconscious, wherein he thought he might find answers through the use of art materials and writing. “The material burst forth from the unconscious, and at first swamped me. It was the prima material for a lifetime’s work” (Jung, 1961, p. 199). Many years later, Jung reflected back: “I needed to absorb the overpowering force of the original experiences … . and I knew nothing better than to write them down … and NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 77 to paint the images that emerged through reliving it all … .” (Jung, 2009, p. 360). Mellick (2019a) makes the point that “by the time he penciled his first drawing on the parchment of Liber Primus, he had been writing prolifically and had worked in pencil, pen, ink, pastel, gouache, watercolor, clay, wood, stone, mixed media, and water-based media, which he mastered in The Red Book” (p. 217). What Jung experienced was that “everything of which we are conscious is an image, and that image is psyche … a world in which the ego is contained” (Jung, 1983, par. 75). An example of “image is psyche” is the painting from The Red Book (Jung, 2009, Image 55) of the Egyptian solar barge carrying the sun through the heavens and fighting off the sea monster (Jung, 2009, p. 284, fn 128). It reflects Jung’s disciplined commitment to move through each day, but at the risk of becoming too reductive or definitive, Jung’s painting might also serve as a spontaneous image for the structure of the psyche, with the relationship between the ego and the Self and the unconscious experienced as a haunting monster. But what about Jung’s actual visual-making process throughout his creation of The Red Book? Jill Mellick’s impressive investigative work (2019a, 2019b) involved extensive analysis and research into Jung’s creative process, his tools, the materials, and how they influenced his creative process. Her compilation of material is a rich contribution for those interested in this particular aspect of Jung’s work, and it extends beyond the scope of this article. However, Mellick (2019b) reveals that when Jung began transferring material into the actual portfolio, he used a wood standup desk that he had built and placed in his office. While using a range of materials and techniques to create the outlines, he obviously aimed for intense full-bodied colors that reflected the ancient texts. This meant he mail-ordered specific colored powders that he mixed like an alchemist with substances to form the powders into brilliant liquid colors. Mellick explains that later Jung used lacquer to preserve his images so they wouldn’t flake; however, she points out that the flaking has allowed us to scientifically understand more about his painting process. She reaffirms Jung’s intensity, which was intrinsic to his character, as expressed through a precise and diligent painting method, using a semi-transparent process to obtain the tension and playfulness between light and shadow—which, when we look closely, is consistently visible throughout the images within The Red Book. Jung’s enthusiasm for experimenting with the process was integral to his therapeutic work with its innate destructive and constructive elements. Jung recalled: “To the extent that I managed to translate the emotions into images—to find the images which were concealed in the emotions—I was inwardly calmed and reassured. Had I left the images hidden in the emotions, I might have been torn to pieces” (1961, p. 177). In fact, Jung realized that had he split the emotions off, he would have probably gone into a neurosis and been ultimately destroyed by them, but his method proved beneficial. Identifying the visual qualities of affect is key to his complex theory and the archetypal content that both anchored him and opened him to transformed states of mind. While working on the The Red Book, Jung was so “wrought up” (1961, p. 177) that he had to take breaks to move his body in nature, play, or do certain yoga positions that could contain and regulate his emotions. Once he was slightly calmer, he returned to his work with the unconscious, continuing to use himself as a research tool through writing and painting of the images. In this dynamic process, he discovered the therapeutic benefit of discovering “the particular images which lie behind emotions” (1961, p. 177). This statement is a powerful 78 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 affirmation of what was then a courageous exploration and discovery of the mythic narrative within the objective psyche. Because Jung began using the arts with his patients early in his career, the Picture Archives at the C. G. Jung Institute Zurich in K€ usnacht holds thousands of paintings made with various media as visual responses to dreams and active imaginations. And so it’s no surprise that we find key therapeutic tenets of the contemporary profession of art therapy rooted in what Jung made visible through The Red Book. Reflecting back, Jung says: “The years when I was pursuing my inner images were the most important in my life—in them everything essential was decided” (1961, p. 199). JUNG AND MANDALAS Mandalas are often used by art therapists to contain and regulate affect or close difficult sessions. Many students don’t realize that Jung had already discovered the beneficial use of mandalas over a century ago, in 1915, to center himself as he emerged from what are known as his “darkest days.” It was not until 1929 that he began to write extensively about mandalas … when he composed the commentary to The Secret of the Golden Flower, a Taoist alchemical manuscript that Richard Wilhelm had sent him the previous year. The text provided the missing link between the ancient sources and contemporary Western mandalas that Jung had been collecting and studying for fourteen years … . Jung described the mandala—in its simplest state—as a circle, especially a “magic circle.” (Zervas, 2019, p. 179) Zervas analyzes and reveals in depth how Jung sketched in pencil various versions of his mandalas, prior to painting them in opaque blues and greens with opposing red and black accents for The Red Book. In these initial sketches he followed the visual movement of introversion and extraversion of psychic energy and understood the circle as a “reconciling symbol” of the transcendent function that brought together the opposites. We see its shape repeated throughout the The Red Book (Zervas, 2019, p. 184). Far more significant, according to Zervas (2019), is that the majority of the mandala sketches were not produced as reported in MDR, but were deliberately thematic and took place between 1917 and 1918, during the time he was writing the Scrutinies. The mandalas “are the visual representations of Jung’s direct experience of the self and the birth of the new God [the birth of Phanes within himself] (Zervas, 2019, p. 207) … which explains why he entitled the final mandala The Cosmic Egg” (p. 205). JUNG: IS THIS ART? During World War I, Jung received a letter from a woman who was most likely Maria Moltzer—his Dutch research assistant. She once again insisted that what he was doing was art. Jung adamantly disagreed, revealing that this notion got on his nerves as it was “far from stupid and therefore dangerously persuasive” (Jung, 1961, p. 195). Jung admits to his vulnerabilities, but his reaction is complicated. Interpretations include a violation of his own methods and a degradation or objectification of his anima or the feminine. And yet Jung was in the midst of a deep process, differentiating art and aesthetics from a new method that could capture the condition of the unconscious. Women were drawn to Jung, perhaps because of his stature and charismatic NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 79 personality, but historically relevant was his pioneering exploration of the anima/animus and the feminine and masculine principles. At that time in history, his ideas were liberating for many women. Jung did not hesitate to tell a woman that if she wished to be creatively productive, she had better acquaint herself with her internal masculine. Often viewed as supportive and encouraging, Jung’s maverick perspective led women to shift their allegiance to their inner purpose. Certainly, Jung had a uniquely personal relationship with his anima, which was a private matter that has now become even more publically scrutinized through The Red Book. In the final pages, he says to her: “I thank you for your love. It is beautiful to hear you speak of love. It is music and old, far-off homesickness. Look, my tears are falling because of your good words. (Jung, 2009, pp. 181–182). According to the analyst Andreas Schweitzer (private communications, 2019), this section was added in 1959. Of this detail, Schweitzer says: “For me this is important, because we can see from this that the anima is a problem that concerns a man almost for his entire life.” Jung’s private wrestling paved the way for the consciousness we have today and the dialectical process that is essential for any creative venture. We are obligated to consider the context of 1916 when Jung stashed the essay on the transcendent function in a drawer because he thought no one would understand it. As unfortunate as this was, perhaps Maria Moltzer’s insistence that he concur that he was making art only further reinforced that his ideas were not yet ready for the world. The empirical Jung perhaps thought further research would clarify and validate the power of making pictures outside of the world of aesthetics and art. He did not know that the discussion could continue 100 years later. Perhaps there is another perspective. As we’ve heard, Jung believed that what he recommended was actually far more than just art—today we would call it art therapy. Jung gave space to the image in all its forms but he made a clear distinction between “art” and products of the unconscious … . He is emphatic that the pictures which he himself made, in exploration of his own unconscious processes, were not “art.” In fact he made it clear that he considered the temptation to regard them as such to be a perilous inflation. (Schaverien, 1992, p. 80) From the perspective of art therapy, Jung’s resistance is reasonable; it was a protection from the risk of distraction and inflation. Most importantly, the boundary created a private space to gain insight into his paintings before they were defined or named. His instinctual reaction was perhaps a defensive compensation for the risk of falling prey to hubris, inflation, flattery, and/or idealization, but his sturdy rejection also illustrates that the final decision on the product must be made by the patient. Jung’s reaction is not surprising; patients in my office will differentiate between their pictures being images and not art—and this personal assessment deserves respect. Again attempting to differentiate aesthetic art from image-making as a healing therapeutic process, Jung said: Although my patients occasionally produce artistically beautiful things … I nevertheless treat them as completely worthless … . It is essential that they should be considered worthless, otherwise my patients might imagine themselves to be artists, and the whole point of the exercise would be missed. It is not a question of art at all—or, rather, it should not be a question of art—but of something more and other than mere art, namely the living effect upon the patient himself (Jung, 1985, par. 104, emphasis added). 80 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 Jung’s reference to the patient’s products as “worthless” sounds dismissive, but in my view Jung is being overly dramatic to make a vital point in response to the pressures he had received to call his own images art. In addition, he is indirectly reminding us of the archetypal energy hidden within the images: to invest too much positivity into an image can be blinding, especially prior to gaining separation and perspective. How we respond can either lead to further unfolding or throw off the psychological and emotional method of investigation and possibly inhibit further engagement by repressing or depleting the new image of its potentiality. Schaverien (1992) explains further: Pictures made in art therapy are not great art and so they cannot, in themselves, evoke such an authentic response in the viewer … . In the case of analytical art psychotherapy, the pictures do have a similar aesthetic effect on the viewer/therapist. This is because the dynamic component which is essential for this quality of experience, extends outwards from the picture to the boundary of the frame of the therapeutic relationship. This is one case when the context in which the picture is made and viewed is a fundamental aspect of the aesthetic experience … . The appreciation of the qualities in the work is conditioned by the therapeutic purpose of the encounter. (pp. 126–127, emphasis added). Whether or not Jung’s images are art is an endless discussion and a distraction from recognizing the deep implications of what Jung had endured and discovered. In the simplest terms he confronted and responded to the objective psyche with its spontaneous expression and autonomous life. When incorporated, Jung realized that the expression of psychic energy contains seeds that lead to a veriditus or a divine healing. This cannot occur without a solid container that respects the sacred deliveries from the soul. In so many ways, Jung was presenting new information to the psychological world. Jung’s concentrated efforts and thoughts with picture-making and active imagination led to magnificent shifts in liberating consciousness and therapeutic practices. By the time Jung was finished with his personal process in The Red Book, he had come to accept art as another possibility when he stated: “To paint what we see before us is a different art from painting what we see within” (Jung, 1985, par. 102). The therapeutic value of picture-making is explained by Jung this way: “A patient needs only to have seen once or twice how much he is freed from a wretched state of mind by working at a symbolical picture, and he will always turn to this means of release whenever things go badly with him” (1985, par. 106). Later, in the Vision Seminars, Jung admits to his uncertainty and the delicate and complicated truth of art therapy: In order to hold an inner experience, it is … a necessity for certain people to see it expressed in external physical form. That is such an important point that one really might be tempted to call it a method, but I do not feel quite safe because these things are very delicate and complicated. (Jung, 1997a, p. 6) [emphasis added] However, ultimately, based on his own withdrawal from the world, Jung emphasizes that the unconscious images create an ethical obligation and that a failure for us to understand them deprives us of our wholeness and “imposes a painful fragmentariness on [our] life” (Jung, 1961, p.193). According to Jung, we remain in service to consciousness. There are letters that reveal that Jung showed his own Red Book to analysands, perhaps to inspire and encourage. Jung’s words to Christiana Morgan are an example of how much he had learned from his own art therapy process: NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 81 I should advise you to put it all down as beautifully as you can—in some beautifully bound book. [Jung instructed his patient]. It will seem as if you were making the visions banal—but then you need to do that—then you are freed from the power of them … . Then when these things are in some precious book you can go to the book and turn over the pages and for you it will be your church—your cathedral—the silent places of your spirit where you will find renewal. If anyone tells you that it is morbid or neurotic and you listen to them—then you will lose your soul—for in that book is your soul. (Jung, 2009, p. 216) Jung knew that his procedures, whether through writing, drawing, or painting, were beneficial for patients who could actually “express their peculiar contents … . There are so many incomprehensible intuitions in such cases, phantasy fragments that rise from the unconscious, for which there is almost no suitable language”2 (Jung, 2009, p. 217). Other relevant declarations for art therapists are Jung’s thoughts on materials: “Colors are feeling values. Mostly to begin with, only a pencil or pen is used to make rapid sketches of dreams, sudden ideas, and fantasies. But from a certain moment the patients begin to make use of color, and merely intellectual interest gives way to emotional participation” (Jung, 1970, par. 333). Such a visual release effectively allows us to see in a shared way what is occurring in the unconscious. With his insistence that analysands paint their dreams, Jung encountered common remarks like “I can’t paint,” “I’ve never been creative,” or “I’m not an artist.” According to Mellick (2019b), when Miss X did not like the way she painted, she told Jung, “The eye was not satisfied.” Jung apparently replied “Truly? Then paint it the easiest way you can, as fast as you can—with vivid colors.” He told his patients to use vivid bright colors because that is what the unconscious likes. “Miss X used watercolors, metallic colors to produce over one thousand paintings preserved in the archives” (pp. 416–417). Jung expressed his faith in the process when he declared: “The patient struggles to give form, however crude and childish, to the inexpressible … . A patient needs only to have seen once or twice how much he is freed from a wretched state of mind by working at a symbolical picture, and he will always turn to this means of release whenever things go badly with him” (Jung, 1985, par. 106). Clearly, art was not the purpose—instead, by 1919, Jung regularly expected his patients to use his methods so he could study the unconscious in more depth. As the pioneer of art therapy, Jung had his analysands paint duplicate pictures so that he could keep one and they could keep the original and live with its effects on them. Today, art therapists use a variety of technologies to document the images. Jung undoubtedly noticed that his methods shifted dissociative states and brought the fragmentation of emotional parts into one contained space. Certainly Jung discovered that the images could be compensatory responses to the ego’s attitude, a concrete place to work with the opposites and explore the tension that is required for transformation. Using the instincts of action and reflection, there was an inherent invitation to attend to the church, the temple, the “silent places of your spirit where you find renewal.” This is when we hear how James’s notions of the transpersonal become an art therapy method and even a clinical intervention that contain and funnel dissociation or neurotic fantasies into a personified imagination and living image. As Mellick (2019a) clearly summarizes about Jung’s Red Book process: “He devoted years to exercising technical and artistic skills, focus, and patience. In so doing, he became not only his own master and student but master of matter and method” (p. 230). 82 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY IN THE UNITED STATES Jung had a far greater influence on the lineage and formation of art therapy than we have been led to believe. In the United Kingdom, Jung’s influence was direct and transparent, particularly with the formation of Withymead in the 1940s, a Jungian community for the healing arts that was founded by Irene Chapenrowe and supported by H. G. Baynes (Stephens, 1986). But, in the United States, the path was more politically disguised and strategic. The story begins with Beatrice Hinkle, an MD who moved to New York City from San Francisco. She trained first as a Freudian and attended the Third International Psychoanalytic Congress in 1911. In the famous photo taken of the congress participants, she can be found sitting in the center of the front row, next to Emma Jung, with Freud and Jung standing behind her. Hinkle shifted her analytic approach toward Jung’s model because she preferred his perspective on the feminine; it confronted the patriarchal assumptions that she herself had rejected. Hinkle was a mother of two children who divorced and remarried. She was charismatic feminist and an avid social organizer in the Greenwich scene of New York City, mingling with an array of artists, writers, social activists, and philosophers (Sherry, 2013). Her own books expanded on Jung’s typology and the role of the feminine in analytical psychology as well as having a tremendous influence on Jungian groups and progressive education in New York City (Sherry, 2013; Staring, Aldridge, & Mcfadyen Christensen, 2018). In The Re-creating of the Individual, Hinkle (1923) provides a comprehensive exploration of individuation and typology and took an interest in spontaneous drawings and how they revealed the relationship between the creative libido and typology: “[T]he character of the forms and conceptions spontaneously created in the drawings and images of adults who have no technical training or knowledge of art creation, but who, nevertheless, frequently produce work of great beauty, and always of a peculiar affective quality, could never be produced by conscious control or willed effort. Indeed, only after one is able to withdraw conscious attention and direction and become sufficiently free from self-consciousness and willed intention, can the unconscious express itself. However, when this is possible, the archaic nature of the productions that come forth is convincing and effective, and to any one previously unacquainted with this activity the work is often amazing” (Hinkle, 1923, pp. 126–127). Hinkle further refers to the therapeutic role of art as “picture writing” a process in which the individual is “ceaselessly busy with finding modes of expression for the moods, feelings, and various psychic reactions … that oldest form of expression … quite spontaneously and without the necessity of conscious learning … they [the images] have a quality of truth, of living power, which is recognized immediately. It is this quality that contrasts most strongly with the ordinary drawing … the effect on the individual producing these creations is … characteristic. He recognizes a significance and validity in these expressions … which no words can define and which are quite independent of external influence … unmistakably [they] reveal the psychological condition of the individual producing them … they are analyzable just as are dreams (1923, p. 127). Jay Sherry (2013) reports that when Hinkle died, at the direction of her will, all of her written material was burned, including assumed letters from her exchanges with Jung, yet Hinkle remains recognized for her English translation of Symbols of Transformation—a publishing sensation of Jung’s work—which impacted her professional associations. Sherry (2015) emphasized that this made her “the key figure in promoting Jung’s new approach to psychology in America” (p. 70). But once her prominent allegiance to Jung’s ideas and analytical psychology became apparent, she NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 83 was blackballed from the Freudian psychoanalytic community in New York City. This, however, did not stop her from continuing to influence the Jungian community and beyond. Two of the individuals she influenced happened to be founders of art therapy: Margaret Naumburg and her older sister Florence Cane. MARGARET NAUMBURG’S DYNAMICALLY ORIENTED ART THERAPY Margaret Naumburg was a powerful visionary in her own right and was well known for her forceful personality. Early on she was a social activist who also mingled with well-known Greenwich artists, writers, and social activists. Two sultry palladium prints, taken by Stiegliz in 1920, can be found at the National Gallery of Art. Eventually she shifted her focus from collective issues to the individual (Karier, 1986), so as to carry the banner for art therapy within educational and clinical settings, beginning in New York City. The first art therapy training program at Hahnemann Hospital in Philadelphia was opened in 1967 due to her visionary energy. Naumburg taught art therapy at New York University until she was in her 80s. As an art therapy student I had the impression that she had a Freudian lens, particularly as my professors reinforced her psychodynamic approaches and ideas. In the shadow was the fact that Naumburg and Cane both analyzed with the Jungian analyst Beatrice Hinkle from 1914 to 1917, overlapping with the period when Hinkle was translating Symbols of Transformation into English. Naumburg later analyzed with the Freudian, A. A. Brill, who was also a parent at the Walden school (Staring et al., 2018) and an early colleague of Hinkle prior to her shift in theoretical allegiance. First studying education at Columbia University, Naumburg was exposed to the ideas of John Dewey, who advocated for art as experience. According to Dewey’s model, creativity, exploration, and self-motivated learning were most successful without competition or grades. Naumburg also studied with Maria Montessori in Italy, but found her approach too rigid for her liking (Karier, 1986). It seems Naumburg gleaned much from her mentors, but had her own ambitions. In 1914, the same year she began her analysis with Hinkle, Naumburg, together with Claire Raphael (Staring et al., 2018), opened the Children’s School in Manhattan, which then became the well-known Walden School. It was the first of its kind as a progressive school. Consistent with Jung’s idea of a training analysis, Naumburg encouraged her teachers to get to know themselves psychologically by entering psychoanalysis so as to better support the spiritual health of the children (Karier, 1986). As an advocate for spontaneous painting and scribble drawings at the school, Naumburg eventually took the process into the New York State Psychiatric Institute, where she conducted 3 years of art therapy research working with psychosis in children. Although she was influenced by Freudian theory, the Jungian analyst and art therapist Michael Edwards (1987) pointed out that Naumburg did not fully agree with all of Freud’s ideas, nor did she appear sympathetic to all of Jung’s theoretical notions. What was evident to Edwards was that “Jung’s ideas seemed to have been absorbed into her own theories of art therapy, which she steadfastly contrasts with more reductive approaches” (1987, p. 95). Cane Detre et al. (1983) refers to Naumburg’s thoughts from The Child and the World (1928) “The emotional development of children, fostered through encouragement of spontaneous creative expression and self-motivated learning, should take precedence over the traditional intellectual approach to the teaching of a standardized curriculum” (p. 113, emphasis added). Clearly Naumburg valued the role of the unconscious and found ways to honor its contents. 84 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 Naumburg published four other books describing and discussing her ideas about art therapy: Schizophrenic Art (1950); Dynamically Oriented Art Therapy (1966/ 1987); An Introduction to Art Therapy (1950/1974); and Psychoneurotic Art (Naumburg & Appel, 1953/2013). Although she attributed her lifelong interest in Jung to Hinkle, when Naumburg published the first art therapy book, Schizophrenic Art in 1950, she showed a clear preference for Freudian thought and terminology. In particular, she quoted Nolan D. C. Lewis of the 1920s as the first psychiatrist to employ analysis of art productions of patients either singly or in a series (Naumburg, 1950, p. 13). Undoubtedly, we might deduce her strategic decision to navigate an environment that had blackballed Hinkle had heightened her awareness of also being a woman entering the male-dominated medical world with a declaration of a new method to work with the unconscious. Although sociopolitical tensions have shifted, they have not been eradicated, so it seems timely to consider the underlying facts that provided the foundation for Naumburg’s passion and convictions. €lzli and was Jung’s original research had focused on psychosis at the Burgho widely published and readily available to her. Furthermore, the Withymead community in Britain was now well established, and Jung’s essay, “The Aims of Psychotherapy,” first delivered in 1929 and published shortly thereafter, had discussed painting as an essential method for psychotherapy. Naumburg referred to H. G. Baynes’s book Mythology of the Soul (1940/2015) and the case material of schizophrenic art, but her comments oversimplified Baynes’s approach, suggesting that her theoretical understanding of such elements as the transcendent function and unifying symbols was incomplete. She referred to the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) but omitted the psychological orientation of its creators, Christiana Morgan and Henry Murray, who were at the Harvard Psychological Clinic and had spent several years in Zurich gaining direct and extensive knowledge of Jung’s theories and methods. In fact, it was Morgan’s personal process and paintings that were studied in the Vision Seminars, illustrating the depth of Jung’s clinical work from an archetypal perspective. Naumburg’s main complaint was how psychoanalysis interpreted and defined the meaning of individual symbols and visual content rather than giving preference to the natural healing process innate within art-making: namely, the emergence of spontaneous images. “Such conflicting interpretations point to the need of giving further attention to encouraging patients to make more interpretations of their own symbolic material” (Naumburg, 1950, pp. 33–34). Naumburg wanted the artist to develop her own visual vocabulary about her symbolic creations when spontaneous painting is used as a primary approach to therapy. This philosophy toward patient artwork echoed Jung’s already published recommendations: Encourage patients to provide their own associations and interpretations for their dreams and images, and recommend the use of spontaneous painting to personify the unconscious. Jung’s aim for active imagination was that the method would allow patients to work independent from analysis. If she had remained current with analytical psychology, she would have known that Jung had differentiated himself from psychoanalysis and, through The Red Book process, eventually declared a preference for analysands’ perspectives of their dreams (or paintings) because it represented what they were closest to in their unconscious. Moreover, Jung saw the purpose of analysis as a process that educated individuals to eventually find their own inner analyst— this was the ultimate goal of active imagination. Thus, he advocated the essential freedom associated with his notion of individuation, something with which Naumburg was clearly aligned and encouraged through her art therapy research and teaching. To be fair, Naumburg did credit Jung for his symbolic work and his idea of the shadow and the collective unconscious. And later in life she admitted to how Jung’s work NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 85 with the collective unconscious and the transpersonal had impacted her personal work (Karier, 1986). But in her early formative days (10 years before Jung’s death), when she was conceptualizing art therapy, Naumburg lumped Jung with all psychoanalysts. The absence of acknowledgment regarding his early influence on the art therapy field suggests perhaps a protection of her own ambitious goals, mixed with an avoidance of political conflict and rejection. Nevertheless, what was seeded in those decisions and passed down through the generations is a deficiency in art therapy’s theoretical understanding and discernment regarding Jung’s pioneering ideas and concepts that actually deserve to bear witness. When art therapists learn about Jung’s model, it brings a theoretical depth to their work. Naumburg’s drive to create a profession that escaped the tensions of the past had lasting repercussions for art therapists who might never gain a clear sense of the sacrifices made by the ancestors, let alone a true understanding of the healing nature of the unconscious. However, given the fierce theoretical allegiances in the New York psychoanalytic community from the 1920s through the 1950s, this was absolutely impossible. Naumburg was strategically wise because, knowing what we know to today, if art therapy were to live and breathe, it needed to be free of theoretical ties to psychoanalysis of any persuasion; most importantly, it required a differentiation from Jung and analytical psychology (Swan-Foster, 2018). Finally, Naumburg, perhaps caught in the original painful divide of opposites between Jung’s and Freud’s theories (possibly the result of her own Jungian and Freudian analyses), may have been motivated to find a third option. As an innovative, intelligent professional woman moving in male-dominated circles, Naumburg was naturally driven to find her individual path, which she found by traveling the edges of analytical psychology, drawing support from Jung’s courage as well as his most popular concepts, while speaking with a more Freudian tongue. Clearly, Naumburg was greatly influenced by Jung’s work, but it is her silent adaptation of Jung’s ideas into American art therapy to provide a fresh, independent path that could garner respect for its own creative identity and clinical expression. FLORENCE CANE: STUDIO ART THERAPY Studio art therapy, as opposed to art psychotherapy, is an approach that many art therapists have aligned themselves with as a way to emphasize the innate healing of art-making. As an art teacher and painting instructor who was influential in her own right in New York City, Florence Cane’s aim was to liberate creativity and individual expression through movement and emotions along with painting. In The Artist in Each of Us, Cane (1951/1983) outlined her teaching method, which focused on the functions of thought, feeling, and movement by way of rhythm and breath, and she expanded on spontaneous painting and scribble drawing. On the first page of her book, she sounded like an advocate for Jungian art therapy when she said: “Nature and art have this in common—a form comes into existence by the union of two opposites. In nature, male and female create a new life. In art, two opposite states of being within the artist are needed to create form” (p. 21). Cane clearly integrated Jung’s ideas on the psyche– soma connection, typology, the opposites, and his notion of psychic energy. Specifically, Cane’s teaching contained some of Jung’s theory on complexes as well as his pivotal two kinds of thinking when she wrote: “The active and receptive states must alternate to produce and complete a work” (p. 21). Cane encouraged a child to solve a problem, not through action, but by covering the eyes with the hands to introvert and see what the unconscious might offer. Not only do we hear echoes of Jung’s reliance on 86 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 the unconscious in Cane’s intervention, but her method also illustrates how much she valued what Jung named the reflective instinct. Without hesitation and with clear influence also from Hinkle, Cane upheld specific ideas as an approach found in Symbols of Transformation to facilitate the innate development of her students, such as sound and rhythm that arises from the body. She firmly echoed Jung’s departure from the singular mechanical reductive approach to include the spontaneous and symbolic. For instance, Jung referred to the early rhythmic sucking of the infant as symbolic of a generative creative process, while Cane followed with the use the early rhythm of breath that awakens the force from the unconscious. She used four different techniques in her work with children: (1) In the Scribble Technique the child used his non-dominant hand to make a scribble and then find an image within the scribble and flush it out. (2) The Limited Color Palette involved a specific process of choosing two colors and finding a relationship between them through making an image. (3) The Body Liberating Movement Exercises involved moving the arms in various ways to relax and then, when ready, using those same movements to create marks. Finally, (4) Add-aMark-Composition game was a process in which the therapist and child alternated making marks to create a picture. These techniques incorporated Jung’s ideas of spontaneous images from the unconscious, the opposites, and relational aspects not just between the ego and the Self, but also within the therapeutic dyad. Cane’s (1951/1983) educational approach clearly valued the unconscious and the synthesis of the psyche–soma through working with the opposites. She aimed to both educate and strengthen the child, and to soften defenses (complexes), so the purposive nature of the unconscious could be expressed through the art (scribble drawings). In teaching color, she might offer limited choices so as not to overwhelm the mind. She also encouraged the child to turn inwards so the answer could arise from the unconscious (p. 22), or to use the body, reflective skills, and deep listening to “draw the creative force to her” (p. 111). While Cane certainly observed specific formal qualities such as line quality, balance, quality of feeling, richness of color, imagination, and use of space for each factor (p. 178), she also integrated what we might consider a psychological assessment, using four factors, as part of her pedagogy. These four factors are (along with my addition of the paired functions) (1) body (movement and quantity) (sensate); (2) psyche (contrasts, value, and quality) (feeling); (3) mind (organization, strategy, and intensity) (thinking); and (4) spirit (emanation and expansion) (intuition). Cane considered the four essential factors (body, psyche, mind, spirit) in terms of skill and development, each paired with typology and undoubtedly impacted by the child’s type (introversion or extraversion). Hinkle’s exploration of creativity and typology undoubtedly influenced Cane’s conceptualization of the individual child’s need in terms of teaching style. Not only was Cane sensitive to the emotional content in the child and her pictures, but she also considered the spirit of the child as “some outside source of wisdom” (1951/1983, p. 22). She noted: “If [the child] is functioning well and simultaneously on the first three factors, it is very likely that the fourth will follow, because when the whole child functions, the spirit awakens” (p. 179). Without naming it as such, her philosophy implies that the Self is the organizing principle of the whole personality. These assessments and interventions are applicable when working with adults and encourage an often long-dormant playful and spontaneous nature to emerge. While Jung’s ideas are perhaps more accepted by and integrated into the collective today than was the case in the 1950s, clinical settings remain biased toward a more ego-oriented approach, with emphasis on the psychodynamic lens. Professors and NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 87 supervisors remain unprepared to accurately articulate Jung’s theoretical model as it relates to art therapy and the purposive nature of the unconscious, so it is unlikely that they can differentiate where his ideas were absorbed or appropriated within an art therapy clinical approach. Because art therapists are typically unaware of some of the above key historical factors, Edwards (1987) suggests that the original split between Freud and Jung is more often than not reenacted or at the very least reinforced. As history is revealed, we can fill in the holes and reinforce the original foundation structured by Jung’s seminal recommendations. THE THIRD THING Art therapy has a clear relationship with Jung’s idea of the third thing—in fact, perhaps it emerged as the third thing out of the tension and subsequent divide between Freud and Jung. The psychological notion of Jung’s third thing seems to have originated in The Red Book when he speaks about Elijah and Salome, saying, “I found the serpent as the third principle” (Jung, 2009, p. 247). The serpent moved between the opposites, masculine and feminine. Eventually Jung referred definitively to “the third thing” in Psychology of the Transference, after having steeped himself in ancient texts and mythology. It is no surprise that the notion of the third has archetypal roots in Hermetic philosophy, with Egyptian and Greek manifestations. As archetypal figures, Thoth and Hermes come together to form the third thing: Hermes Trismegistus. Briefly, Thoth was the Egyptian ambassador maneuvering between the opposing armies of Horus and Seth, and he mediated the opposites through a peace treaty. Across the Mediterranean the Greek equivalent of Thoth was Hermes, the god of communication, consciousness, and the arts. It is said that Hermes’ theft of Apollo’s cows led him to offer a relational repair by inventing the lyre, which he offered to Apollo. Hermes action gives value to imagination and intuition through this relational repair process. Like Thoth, Hermes is also known for mediating between and unifying the opposites. When these two gods were worshiped as one god, the reference was made to Hermes Trismegistus, the figure who combined features from both the Egyptian and Greek gods. Hermes Trismegistus is purported to have written the Hermetica, the Egyptian–Greek wisdom texts discussing the divine, alchemy, cosmology, and other related esoteric topics from the 2nd century CE and later. The teachings are presented as dialogues in which a teacher, thought to be the “thrice-greatest Hermes,” enlightens a disciple. In this brief encapsulation, we can hear the unification of the opposites joined by the thrice-greatest Hermes. We might also consider Jung’s Philomen as the wisdom teacher with whom he dialogued. Today, examples of the third within analysis might be referred to using following terms: The third thing (C. G. Jung) Transitional or potential space (Donald Winnicott) Reverie (Wilfred Bion) Analytic third (Thomas Ogden) The third (Jessica Benjamin) Associative dreaming (August Cwik) We might be curious how the third thing as a clinical notion showed up for Jung through his picture-making. I return to Mellick’s research (2019b, p. 228), where she explores Jung’s image of a tree from The Red Book (p. 131, Fig. 84) with its notable use 88 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 of light and dark through a dominant blue tone. She explains that Jung painted into individual cells that contained their own space. As if miniature mandalas, Mellick explains Jung used a rarely used wet-on-wet technique. Wetting a small area of the vellum, Mellick imagines that Jung probably dipped his brush into the pigment and then quickly dabbed the wet on the paper to watch the pigment flow through the water to meet the boundaries created by the dry paper. Because of the level of detail, it is easy to imagine that Jung worked slowly with the patterned bark of the tree, with concentrated precision so the light of each diamond would be accurately contained and its own sacred space. Offering an illuminating image for the underlying archetype that supported Jung’s process, Mellick (2019b, pp. 391–393) refers to the “ma” from Harry Wilmer’s book Quest for Silence (2000). Amplifying the negative space within each diamond of the tree bark, the “ma” might be experienced by the artist as both emptiness and possibility. Mellick described how Jung repeatedly painted each circle as its own inner world, and then carefully outlined or filled it in with further detail to create a whole. Out of this immersion, we might imagine that Jung experienced the transpersonal state notated by James, eventually integrating the idea of the third thing. We can easily imagine Jung’s engagement with “ma” or the “pause” found within the negative space of the diamond shape, in the same way the Japanese refer to “ma” as the interval, pause, or a poetic place in the imaginative process. Roughly, the belief is translated as “space,” “gap,” or “consciousness of place” where two very different things can simultaneously coexist. Reverberating in this description of “ma” is the original definition of the symbol (two things thrown together), and Jung’s method of active imagination in which an image becomes a living symbol, or carries into consciousness the symbolic third. In the moment of possibility, if we return to Jung’s tree, each circle or diamond in the tree is an awareness of form and non-form at once. Essentially, we experience the empty spaces on the canvas as an experiential moment with an emphasis on a pause in time or an interval that poetically expresses the emptiness full of potential within a single moment of the analytic process. Precision and focus matter as much as emanation and expansion. We experience “ma” in art, music, poetry, and dance, and we experience it in our consulting rooms. We wait for a brief moment when there is a convergence of opposites, a breath, a negative space, a silent pause. Rather than being torn asunder, the opposites find an ineffable moment to coexist—nothing joined with possibility—just long enough so that the third thing can become known by the dyadic couple. THE THIRD IN JUNGIAN ART THERAPY Art therapy provides the images for the underlying archetypal patterns that reference the third thing. The following is a selection of ways in which the materials create the third space, where the thing becomes knowable and even visible. Initiation process and the number three in pictures (change) Pre-liminal—materials, empty paper Liminal—sacred space for active expression Post-liminal—final image and reflection Glue: binds two things to make the third thing “Third hand” (analyst participation and analyst response art) Simultaneity—visible states of consciousness coexisting Scapegoat—picture holds and carries what is intolerable, not ready for integration NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY Living symbol—the brings wholeness result of the transcendent function 89 that In Jungian art therapy, the third can be found and expressed in various ways. Spontaneous images or pictures are created to discover and hold the inexpressible or what is not yet known by the conscious psyche. At times the spontaneous pictures illuminate a prognosis or a future aspect of ourselves that remains unknowable to us even as the image holds its “known thing” until we are ready to experience what is presented. The purposive energy from the unconscious finds its place through image, destructive or constructive, regressive or progressive. We may or may not pay attention or fully understand, yet psyche continues to do its job. The third can be found when we are presented with loose materials like paints or more structured materials like pencils or pens. The type of glue, clay, blank paper, or collage supplies matter. Inherent in every picture-making process is the archetypal pattern of initiation with three stages: pre-liminal (separation), liminal, and post-liminal (integration). The pattern illustrates an image for the third when we separate from the world as we contemplate our emotions, gather our art materials, and consider an empty piece of paper. When we cross the threshold into the liminal space, we actively engage in expressing the un-worded and invisible. Within this liminal sacred space an image or form is worked with, while the image or form also works on us. There may be a tension, a tempering, a complete immersion in the bath of the creative waters as we engage with what is enigmatic and ineffable, as both past and future coexist in the present. The image shifts and evolves. Once the image is completed, we “return” from the liminal space to reflect upon what we experienced “back then,” what “lives” documented before us, and what we carry forward into our future. What has been spontaneously revealed and what we bring back from the liminal space may become a living symbol through active imagination. The three stages are important because they highlight the archetypal nature of not just initiation, but also of the number three and what Abt (2005) names as the evolutionary process and irreversible aspect of time (p. 123): “The number three becomes connected to this inner determination … understood as fate … for instance, the Fates … Norns … usually … in triadic form [p. 123]. Whenever the number three appears in a … picture, we can assume that whatever is connected to this number is now actively influencing or possessing the ego … [and] can also point to the beginning of a fateful new development” (Abt, 2005, pp. 125–126). A version of the “third hand,” developed by the art therapist Edith Kramer, is meant to suggest when the therapist/analyst is enlisted to offer assistance. This might mean helping to sharpen pencils or finding the right color. It can also be the hand that holds the paper so it doesn’t move. When asked to draw how she was feeling, Ellen depicted the spontaneous image of feeling suffocated (Figure 7). She requested that I help her get out from underneath the yellow grid by drawing something on the picture. In a new picture (Figure 8), I added a crane with an arm that could lift the yellow grate so that she might escape in order to preserve the original image or “complex” for future reference. Out she ran, escaping with the help of my offering “a third hand.” While the depiction of this process may sound reductive and overly simplified, the psychic energy within the room was intense and urgent, laden with early childhood memories. Her ability to access an “inner agent” and to ask for help, although not necessarily life-changing, was reparative and enhanced her confidence around making choices, coping with change, and engaging in movement versus habitual collapse, paralysis, or frozen emotional states. 90 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 FIGURE 7. Yellow Grid, Water soluble pastels, Caran d’Arch on paper (12 18 in). Another example of the third hand highlights how there may be an intersection of transference–countransference. When paints are left over from a session, I might use them in a third-hand response image with the patient’s chosen colors. I happened to do this after a teenager, who struggled with family and social issues, left my office. Her internalized anger and sorrow were understandable; when she verbalized her emotions, she was often repudiated, leading to further internalized anger and intensifying selfharming behaviors. On this particular day, I felt disappointed and discouraged with her fierce determination of being “right” and shutting me and others out. The painting that emerged (Figure 9) offered a healing image of the “third thing.” As I put the paint on the paper, a brown circle emerged that reminded me of her hair and the peach skin color looked like hands, and so I worked to bring these two aspects together into an image of a young figure holding a golden ball. The dripping of blue paint happened unexpectedly, by accident, and forced me to accept the loss of the path I thought I was taking, of the perfect image. My own recent loss of failing an exam put me in touch with our over-lapping disappointments. Painting this image brought forth the third, documenting an intimate and private space that revealed the connection between the two of us; a shared space around disappointment, sorrow, and pain. At the same time the golden ball illuminated what was possible, what could be found within the suffering. I did not share the image with her until our therapeutic work ended. I showed her the painting and gave her a photo of it, a reminder that she held a golden ball and that while she was struggling, there were still possibilities. She was touched that I had held her in mind through the image. I later learned that she had carried the photo of the painting through residential treatment because it reminded her to look for the gold within her emotional struggle. Another example of the third is simultaneity. Very often pregnant women will draw themselves pregnant, but when they do, we see their body, the fetus, and then their clothes. This layered imagery illustrates the layers of consciousness, the third being the fetus that exists between the privacy of the body and the clothed world of the collective. The placenta is a powerful biological organ of mediation between the mother NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 91 FIGURE 8. Crane Lifts Yellow Grid. Water soluble pastels, Caran d’Arch on paper (12 18 in). FIGURE 9. Golden Ball, Acrylic on paper, painted by author (36 24 in). and the fetus and has been called “the third brain” (Yen, 1994). The research suggests a powerful somatic image for the intermediary space that holds potential and possibility within the communication process of birthing a new consciousness. The image serving as the scapegoat (Schaverien, 1992) is another example of the third thing because it carries away for the patient that which is intolerable and unacceptable. A woman who lost her baby in the hospital due to medical negligence 92 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 created a collage of black and white paper that she called “garbage,” as it documented the tremendous wordless betrayal and grief of leaving the hospital without her baby. Symbols also illustrate the third, the effects of the transcendent function, and present a sense of wholeness. For instance, the image of the tree can have various meanings, all of which bring forth the personal relationship with the tree as much as the archetypal quality of the tree. One woman thought she had messed up her picture, but then she realized that what was trying to become visible was the tree from her childhood, something she had not considered in many years but now thought was the missing puzzle piece. Another woman who was pregnant and preparing for birth drew herself as a tree with deep roots and outstretched branches (Swan-Foster, 2018). A student who had negative views about trees then realized this was her critical voice speaking and decided to embellish the tissue paper image of the tree with evergreen trimmings so that it could weather the internalized “monster” voice. Jung’s personal process and creative work are a profoundly important contribution to art therapy’s history and development. He was well aware that his process stirred the energy of the unconscious. He discovered that the regulation of this energy meant confronting the internal opposites until they could become visible. Through his commitment to the deep processes he recorded in The Red Book, Jung learned that his images offered containment, emotional over-stimulation as much as regulation and emotional relief, documentation, and meaning. The symbols could verify and facilitate the movement of psychic energy and the innate construction–destruction–reconstruction process. The powerful outcome was that the internal emotional tension between the ego and the unconscious could give way to a visual dialogue or vision that furthered individuation and supported the development of consciousness. Jungian art therapy makes the journey visible as the images and subsequent symbols remind us of wholeness and possibility. Symbolism arrests your attention immediately. You are unable to just glide over it and dismiss it … It says: “I give you the keys to locked doors.” … I quite recognize that the aeasthetic attitude is necessary for art, but this is a vision; it is not art, it is symbolism. (Jung, 1930–1934, 1997b, p. 930) Nora Swan-Foster, MA, ATR-BC, LPC, is a Jungian analyst and art therapist in private practice in Boulder, Colorado. She is an analyst member of the IRSJA and recent seminar coordinator for the Boulder Jung Seminar. Nora has presented and published on several topics and is the author of Jungian Art Therapy: Dreams, Images and Active Imagination and edited the forthcoming book Childbearing Issues and Art Therapy. She is Co-Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Analytical Psychology. NOTES 1. Because Jerome Bruner (1960/1977) endorsed the idea that motivation for learning is based on interest and not external competition, he advocated for learning structure over facts with the goal of creating a spiral curriculum. “A curriculum as it develops should revisit these basic NORA SWAN-FOSTER 䉬 C. G. JUNG’S INFLUENCE ON ART THERAPY 2. 93 ideas repeatedly, building upon them until the student has grasped the full formal apparatus that goes with them” (p. 13). Letter to J. A. Gilbert on December 20, 1929. FURTHER READING Abt, T. (2005). Introduction to picture interpretation according to C. G. Jung. Zurich, Switzerland: Living Human Heritage. Baynes, G.H. (1940/2015). Mythology of the soul: A research into the unconscious from schizophrenic dreams and drawings. New York, NY: Routledge. Bollas, C. (1989). The shadow of the object: Psychoanalysis of the unthought known. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. Bruner, J. (1960/1977). The process of education. Boston, MA: Harvard University Press. Cane Detre, K., Frank, T., Refsnes Kniazzeh, C., Robinson, M. C., Rubin, J. A., & Ulman, E. (1983). Roots of art therapy: Margaret Naumburg (1890–1983) and Florence Cane (1882–1952)—A family portrait. American Journal of Art Therapy, 22(4), 113–116. Cane, F. (1983). The artist in each of us. Craftsbury Common, VT: Art Therapy Publications. (Original work published 1951) Chodorow, J. (Ed). (1997). Jung on active imagination. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Clay, C. (2016). Labyrinths: Emma Jung, her marriage to Carl, and the early years of psychoanalysis. New York, NY: Harper. Edwards, M. (1987). Jungian analytic art therapy. In J. Rubin (Ed.), Approaches to art therapy: Theory and technique (pp. 92–113). New York, NY: Brunner/Mazel. Fischer, T., & Kaufmann, B. (2019). C. G. Jung and modern art. In U. Hoerni, T. Fischer, & B. Kaufmann (Eds.), The art of C. G. Jung (pp. 19–32). New York, NY: Norton. Hinkle, B. (1923). The re-creating of the individual: A study of psychological types and their relation to psychoanalysis. London, UK: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. James, W. (1912). The varieties of religious experience. Charleston, SC: Createspace Independent Publishing. (Original work published 1902) Jung, C. G. (1961). Memories, dreams, reflections. New York, NY: Vintage Books. Jung, C. G. The collected works of C. G. Jung. (H. Read, M. Fordham, G. Adler, & W. McGuire, Eds., R. F. C. Hull, Trans.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. (1967). Vol. 5. Symbols of transformation. (1970). Vol. 14. Mysterium coniunctionis. (1972). Vol. 8. The structure and dynamics of the psyche. (1983). Vol. 13. Alchemical studies. (1985). Vol. 16. The practice of psychotherapy. Jung, C. G. (1997a). Visions: Notes of the seminar given in 1930–1934 by C. G. Jung, Vol. 1 (C. Douglas, Ed). New York, NY: Bollingen Foundation. Jung, C. G. (1997b). Visions: Notes of the seminar given in 1930–1934 by C. G. Jung, Vol. 2 (C. Douglas, Ed). New York, NY: Bollingen Foundation. Jung, C. G. (2009). The red book (or) liber novus. (S. Shamdasani, Ed.; M. Kyburtz, J. Peck, & S. Shamdasani, Trans.). New York, NY: Norton. Karier, C. (1986). Scientists of the mind: Intellectual founders of modern psychology. Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press. doi:10.1086/ahr/92.4.925 94 PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 䉬 VOLUME 63, ISSUE 1 / 2020 Mellick, J. (2019a). Matter and method in The Red Book: Selected findings. In U. Hoerni, T. Fischer, & B. Kaufmann (Eds.), The art of C.G. Jung (pp. 217–231). New York, NY: Norton. Mellick, J. (2019b). The Red Book hours: Discovering C. G. Jung’s art mediums and creative process. Zurich, Switzerland: Verlag Scheidegger & Spiess. Naumburg, M. (1928). The child and the world: Dialogues in modern education. New York, NY: Harcourt, Brace. Naumburg, M. (1950). Schizophrenic art: Its meaning in psychotherapy. New York, NY: Grune & Stratton. Naumburg, M. (1950/1974). An introduction to art therapy: Studies of the “free” art expression of behavior problem children and adolescents as a means of diagnosis and therapy. New York, NY: Teachers College Press, Columbia University. Naumburg, M. (1966/1987). Dynamically oriented art therapy: Its principals and practice. Chicago, IL: Magnolia Street Publications. Naumburg, M., & Appel, K. (1953/2013). Psychoneurotic art: Its function in psychotherapy. Whitefish, MT: Literary Licensing, LLC. Schaverien, J. (1992). The revealing image: Analytical art psychotherapy in theory and practice. New York, NY: Routledge. Shamdasani, S. (1999). Memories, dreams, omissions. In P. Bishop (Ed.), Jung in contexts: A reader (pp. 33–50). New York, NY: Routledge. Shamdasani, S. (Ed.). (2009). Introduction. In M. Kyburtz, J. Peck, & S. Shamdasani (Trans.), The red book: A reader's edition (pp. 1–113). New York, NY: W.W. Norton. Shamdasani, S. (2012). Introduction. In R.F.C. Hull (Trans.), Jung contra Freud: The 1912 New York lectures on the theory of psychoanalysis (pp. vii–xxi). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Sherry, J. (2013). Beatrice Hinkle and the early history of Jungian psychology in New York. Behavioral Sciences (Sciences), 3(3), 492–500. doi:10.3390/bs3030492 Sherry, J. (2015). Carl Jung, Beatrice Hinkle, and Charlotte Teller, the New York Times reporter. In M. E. Mattson (Eds.), Jung in the academy and beyond: The Fordham lectures 100 years later (pp. 65–73). New York, NY: Spring Press. Staring, J., Aldridge, J., & Mcfadyen Christensen, L. (2018). The influence of Beatrice Hinkle and Jungian psychology on the early progressive school movement in the United States. 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