Margaret Naumburg (May 14, 1890 – February 26, 1983) was an American psychologist, educator, artist, author and among the first major theoreticians of art therapy.[1] She named her approach dynamically oriented art therapy.[2][3] Prior to working in art therapy, she founded the Walden School of New York City.

Margaret Naumburg
Born
Margaret Naumburg

(1890-05-14)May 14, 1890
New York City, United States
DiedFebruary 26, 1983(1983-02-26) (aged 92)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materVassar College, Barnard College, Columbia University, London School of Economics
Known forFirst American psychologist to provide training and graduate level courses in art therapy. Introduction of the first Montessori school in America.
AwardsHonorary Life Membership, American Art Therapy Association, Ernest Kris Prize in 1973, Fellow of the American Orthopsychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association
Scientific career
Fieldspsychology, education, child development, art therapy, dynamically oriented art therapy
InstitutionsWalden School, University of Louisville, New York Psychiatric Institute, New York University

Life and work

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Naumburg finished undergraduate studies at Vassar and Barnard colleges in New York.

She completed graduate work at Columbia University at the London School of Economics, and Oxford. While in Italy, she studied child education with Maria Montessori.[4][5] This time spent with Maria Montessori inspired Naumburg to open the first Montessori school in the United States. In 1915, she opened "Children's School," which was later renamed Walden School. It began with two teachers and ten students focusing on letting children develop their own interests and ideas. Naumburg believed children would not only acquire knowledge but learn how to use knowledge to their advantage.[6] She believed understanding yourself was so important that she encouraged her staff at the school to undergo psychoanalysis.

Up to the present time, education has missed the real significance of the child's behavior by treating surface actions as isolated conditions. Having failed to recognize the true sources of behavior, it has been unable effectively to correct and guide the impulses of human growth.... The new advances in psychology, however, provide a key to the real understanding of what makes a child tick.[7]

Many notable individuals taught at the Walden School including Lewis Mumford, Hendrik van Loon, her sister Florence Cane, and Ernest Bloch.[4]

Naumburg married writer Waldo Frank in 1916, with whom she had a son, Thomas, in 1922. They divorced in 1924. She started writing shortly after and published her first book in 1928.

Margaret Naumburg is credited with introducing art as a therapeutic modality in the 1940s.<[3] Between 1941 and 1947 Naumburg worked at the New York State Psychiatric Institute with adults and children. She later published a series of case studies where she used art for diagnosis and therapy in the institution.[8]: 59  However, she was unique in this endeavor because she was using it as a primary agent rather than an auxiliary tool. She called her approach Dynamically Oriented Art Therapy, which was based primarily on Freudian theory. This approach, her main contribution to the art therapy community, promotes " the release of spontaneous imagery" from the client through the symbols drawn and free association of the artworks.[8]: 145  Naumburg viewed art therapy as a distinctive form of psychotherapy.[3] She was also sympathetic to Jungian notions of universal symbolism and Harry Stack Sullivan's ideas about interpersonal psychiatry. Building off the work of Freud and Jung, Naumburg explored the inner personal meaning of symbols.[9] Naumburg insisted that the only valid interpretation of anyone's art came from the creator. She was skeptical of simple or rigid approaches to symbolic meaning, which was consistent with Freud's teaching about dream analysis.[1] Naumburg wrote "when art teachings are routine it discourages efforts at spontaneous and creative expression forcing pupils to recreate what they already know is good." (Naumburg, 1973, p. 137).

Naumburg's directive of choice was scribble drawing. Naumburg used large sheets of paper and allowed the patient to move their chosen material, paint or chalk pastel, around the page until satisfied but asked that the material not be lifted from the page from start to finish. After the drawing is created the drawer is then allowed to look at the artwork and try to create another form from the scribble. The client is encouraged to move the page around until an image is found. Once an image is seen in the scribble drawing, or painting, they are asked to color it in. At this point if the client wants to talk about the artwork while creating, they are encouraged to do so. This technique can also be done with the eyes closed. Closing the eyes encourages the creator to become less inhibited to force a form from the free flowing lines. Another way of using this technique is to use the nondominant hand. This forces the creator to use another part of the brain hopefully releasing the unconscious mind to form the symbolic imagery needed to gain access to more insight of the self. Scribble drawing was developed by her sister Florence Cane. She used this technique believing it helped release unconscious imagery.[1]

Dynamically Oriented Art Therapy is based on recognizing that man's fundamental thoughts and feelings come from the unconscious. Often thoughts and feelings are reached through expression in images rather than words. Like psychoanalytic procedures, images may deal with dreams, fantasies, daydreams, fears, conflicts and memories. Whether trained or untrained individuals have the capacity to project their inner conflicts into visual form. In this approach, the therapist withholds interpretation encouraging clients to discover what their picture means to them.[10] It was important to Naumburg to avoid interpreting or commenting on the client's artwork so the client would not change their mind about what was created and to avoid being wrong. Naumburg used art as the means for clients to visually project their conflicts, and when it was too difficult for the client to relax, she would provide them with art lessons or specific directive projects instead.[10]

The American Art Therapy Association (ATA) recognized her pinnacle achievements with art as therapy with the highest honor by giving her the first Honorary Life Membership award.[2]: 42  She was awarded the honor in 1971. She taught art therapy at undergraduate level at New York University. She successfully lobbied for the creation of a graduate level program at the university that began in 1969. Naumburg taught into her eighties.[4] She died in 1983 at the age of 92.[7]

Books

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  • The child and the world: Dialogues in modern education. (1928). New York: Harcourt, Brace. Digitized October 29, 2007. OCLC 498818045
  • Studies of the "Free" Expression of Behavior Problem Children as a Means of Diagnosis and Therapy, Publisher Coolidge Foundation, 1947 – Art ISBN 9780807724255
  • Schizophrenic Art: Its Meaning in Psychotherapy (1950) OCLC 1253430
  • Psychoneurotic Art, Its Function in Psychotherapy: correlation of the patient's Rorschach and other tests with the patient's art productions, by Adolpf G. Woltmann., Published 1953 OCLC 488744997
  • Dynamically Oriented Art Therapy: Its Principles and Practice. (1966). New York: Grune & Stratton. Republished 1987, Chicago: Magnolia Street, ISBN 0-9613309-1-0
  • An Introduction to Art Therapy: Studies of the "Free" Art Expression of Behavior Problem Children and Adolescents as Means of Diagnosis and Therapy (Copyright 1950 and 1973 by Margaret Naumburg). Foreword to the first edition by Nolan D. C. Lewis, M.D. New York: Teachers College Press, Columbia University. Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 73-78074 ISBN 9780807724255

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Rubin, Judith A (2001). Approaches to art therapy: Theory and technique. Brunner-Routledge. ISBN 1583910700.
  2. ^ a b Junge, Maxine B (2010). "Margaret Naumburg". The modern history of art therapy in the United States. Biography. Charles C Thomas-Publisher, LTD. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-398-07941-3.
  3. ^ a b c Malchiodi, Cathy (2007). The art therapy sourcebook. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780071468275.
  4. ^ a b c Cane, K. D., Frank, T., Kniazzeh, C. R., 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, 111–123. ISSN 0007-4764
  5. ^ Gutek, Gerald L., Gutek, Patricia A. (2020) America's Early Montessorians: Anne George, Margaret Naumburg, Helen Parkhurst and Adelia Pyle. Springer Nature. p. 6. ISBN 9783030548346
  6. ^ Milite, G.A. (2011) "Naumburg, Margaret (1890–1983)". Encyclopedia of Psychology. FindArticles.com.
  7. ^ a b Altman, Julie. "Margaret Naumburg". Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Retrieved June 17, 2012.
  8. ^ a b Rubin, Judith A (2010). Introduction to art therapy: Sources and resources. Routledge. ISBN 9780415960939.
  9. ^ Arrington, Doris Banowsky (2001). Home is where the art is: An art therapy approach to family therapy. Springfield, Ill.: Charles C Thomas. pp. 19, 20, 21, 141. ISBN 0-398-07161-6.
  10. ^ a b Naumburg, Margaret (1966). Dynamically Oriented Art Therapy: Its Principles and Practices. New York, NY: Grunt & Stratton, Inc. ISBN 0-9613309-1-0.

External sources

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