Group Mural / Collaborative Mural is an art therapy method that uses image, material, and symbolic process to externalize experience and make it available for reflection.
Step-by-step guide
- Clarify the clinical aim and offer a choice of materials
- Invite image-making without performance pressure
- Observe process, affect, body, and material use
- Ask the client to describe the work before interpreting it
- Explore associations, title, voice of the image, and bodily response
- Close with one integration question or next step
When to use
- When verbal expression is limited or overcontrolled
- When symbolic externalization may make affect safer
- For children, trauma, grief, identity work, and creative exploration
Key phrases
Let the image begin before you know what it means.
Follow-up questions
What do you notice first?
If this image had a voice, what would it say?
Where do you feel this in your body?
Alternative phrasings
This is not about drawing well.
We can stay with color, line, shape, and feeling.
Warnings
- β οΈ Do not impose symbolic interpretations
- β οΈ Do not treat artistic skill as clinical progress
- β οΈ Pace trauma material and preserve client choice
Source: Naumburg, M. Kramer, E. Malchiodi, C. art therapy clinical tradition
Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.