Publications

CORNELIA ELBRECHT

 

Cornelia Elbrecht has authored four internationally published books on Guided Drawing® and Clay Field Therapy® – drawing on her extensive experiences with clinical art therapy practice. These books have become corner-stone resources for anyone interested in the healing potential of Sensorimotor Art Therapy®.

Her books are available from major booksellers in paperback, eBook and audio book formats.

Healing Trauma in Children with Clay Field Therapy

How Sensorimotor Art Therapy Supports the Embodiment of Developmental Milestones

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht; Foreword by Cathy Malchiodi PhD North Atlantic Books 2021, Berkeley California

From the moment we’re born, we rely on our hands to perceive the world. It’s through touch that we communicate with our primary caregivers and attain an abiding sense of love and security. In Clay Field therapy, client children work with clay and water in a rectangular box. The therapeutic focus is not on object creation, but on the touch connection with the clay as a symbolic external world. Movement, touch, and sensory feedback that have long been out of reach are actualized through the creative process, enabling the child to heal past wounds and regain a more fulfilling sense of self.  

Read moreFrom the moment we’re born, we rely on our hands to perceive the world. It’s through touch that we communicate with our primary caregivers and attain an abiding sense of love and security. In Clay Field therapy, client children work with clay and water in a rectangular box. The therapeutic focus is not on object creation, but on the touch connection with the clay as a symbolic external world. Movement, touch, and sensory feedback that have long been out of reach are actualized through the creative process, enabling the child to heal past wounds and regain a more fulfilling sense of self.

Author and therapist Cornelia Elbrecht has been a leader in groundbreaking art therapy techniques for over 40 years. In Healing Trauma in Children with Clay Field Therapy, she shows how embodied expression within the Clay Field can be an effective tool in treating children suffering the mental, emotional, and physical effects of trauma. She discusses the theory and practice of Clay Field therapy using dozens of case examples and more than 200 images.

Working within a fun, safe, and trusting environment, children respond with their embodied braced, chaotic, or dissociated structures of the past, but are then able to foster new sensorimotor experiences that enhance self-esteem, empowerment, and a restoration of developmental deficits. Child therapists will find this book to be a valuable tool–working with a Clay Field can reach even the earliest developmental trauma events, repairing their damage through the haptic hands-brain connection.

“In spending a fruitful day with Heinz Deuser discussing his Clay Field approach, it was clear there was a close ‘bottom-up’ relationship between his work and my work in Somatic Experiencing. Cornelia, a student of ours, has immersed her many years of expertise in somatic-based trauma healing and teaching of Clay Field Therapy into her new book, Healing Trauma in Children with Clay Field Therapy. I recommend her book not only to child practitioners but to therapists and body-workers of all kinds.”

– Peter A. Levine, PhD, author of Waking the Tiger and In an Unspoken Voice

More endorsements

“Cornelia Elbrecht’s extensive experience, life’s work, research, and development of sensorimotor art therapy have been sophistically synthesized into this significant text. Considerable insights into the critical and transformative therapeutic work with children are elevated through a carefully constructed framework against the backdrop of active engagement and profound clinical case material. Achieving developmental milestones and healing from trauma through structured and supported engagement involves complex and intricate processes. The contents of this text will certainly equip and further inform practitioners at any stage in their career, including the most seasoned. An excellent addition to any professional, medical, institutional, or academic library.”

– Ronald P.M.H. Lay, MA, AThR, ATR-BC, registered and credentialed art therapist, consultant, supervisor, and program leader of the MA in Art Therapy program at LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore

“Elbrecht describes elegantly how interacting with a clay field can awaken our senses, particularly our sense of touch, thus facilitating a feeling of embodiment, agency, connection, and trust, functions that are sorely lacking in the aftermath of trauma. Through this unique, bottom-up approach, we are reminded how sensory input can have a transformative effect on how we interact with ourselves and the world. Working with the clay field, among other therapies focusing on sensorimotor input, has the potential to transform our understanding and treatment of trauma-related disorders.”

– Ruth Lanius, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry, and director of the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) research unit at the University of Western Ontario

“Too often art therapy focuses on emotions and emotional expression rather than engaging sensorial impressions. The discovery of interoceptive wisdom, especially for traumatized children, is the purpose of the Clay Field, so elegantly presented by Cornelia Elbrecht. She intimately understands the haptic vocabulary of clay as a language for supporting a traumatized nervous system. Elbrecht demonstrates through case-vignettes how clay is an ideal material for stimulating embodied joy while also developing sensorimotor-based ego strengths for repairing psychological injuries. So much of therapy happens while handling and working with art materials. With clay, as this book demonstrates, we can create our way through our suffering.”

– Michael A. Franklin, PhD, ATR-BC, professor at Naropa University, Boulder, Colorado

Healing Trauma with Guided Drawing

A Sensorimotor Art Therapy Approach to Bilateral Body Mapping

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht; Foreword by Cathy Malchiodi PhD North Atlantic Books 2021, Berkeley California

 

Purchase from: 
Amazon, Barnes & NoblesFootprint Australia and others

Rhythmic bilateral repetition is used to express muscular tension, pain and emotions. Clients then, with an almost massage-like approach, find movements that soothe the pain, discharge inner tension and repair boundary breaches. Simple archetypal shapes, meanwhile, offer invaluable non-verbal intervention tools to the therapists.

Read more

A body-focused, trauma-informed art therapy that will appeal to art therapists, somatic experiencing practitioners, bodyworkers, artists, and mental health professionals

While art therapy traditionally focuses on therapeutic image-making and the cognitive or symbolic interpretation of these creations, Cornelia Elbrecht instructs readers how to facilitate the body-focused approach of guided drawing. Clients draw with both hands and eyes closed as they focus on their felt sense. Physical pain, tension, and emotions are expressed without words through bilateral scribbles. Clients then, with an almost massage-like approach, find movements that soothe their pain, discharge inner tension and emotions, and repair boundary breaches. Archetypal shapes allow therapists to safely structure the experience in a nonverbal way. Sensorimotor art therapy is a unique and self-empowering application of somatic experiencing—it is both body-focused and trauma-informed in approach—and assists clients who have experienced complex traumatic events to actively respond to overwhelming experiences until they feel less helpless and overwhelmed and are then able to repair their memories of the past. Elbrecht provides readers with the context of body-focused, trauma-informed art therapy and walks them through the thinking behind and process of guided drawing—including 100 images from client sessions that serve as helpful examples of the work.

“A profound journey from an intuitive, ‘felt sense’ experience, giving rise to lifelong exploration of theoretical constructs involving the integration of sensorimotor approaches and bilateral body mapping. This integrative practice transcends anecdotal findings from creative arts therapies by bringing neurobiological considerations with foundational art therapy theory and practice.”

Elizabeth Warson, PhD, ATR-BC, LPC, NCC, EMDR

More endorsements

“Cornelia Elbrecht’s book draws the reader’s attention to an understanding of how line quality, shape, form, colour, and movement in art making can have a dynamic impact on the client who has experienced trauma. The creation of archetypal visual forms is explored for visceral and embodied effects in the art maker. Her model of art therapy is informed by key authorities in the trauma field, including the seminal work of Peter Levine. Elbrecht conveys her method of art therapy visually as well as descriptively with the generous inclusion of many illustrations. This text contributes a unique perspective to the literature on art, healing, and trauma.”

–Patricia Fenner, PhD, senior lecturer and coordinator of the master of art therapy program at the School of Psychology and Public Health at La Trobe University, Melbourne

“It is revitalising to read this contemporary and provocative text that sensitively addresses the complexity of trauma and trauma healing. Sophistically articulated from her life’s work and experience, Cornelia Elbrecht provides a body-focused framework for therapists to navigate difficult terrain in ways that are meaningful, straightforward, life-changing, and applicable in context from which an arts-informed perspective is maximised. She acknowledges the inherent resilience of the body and how it can be used for transformative and healing purposes within the therapeutic encounter. This pivotal text is an essential must-have as it will most certainly progress the discipline and discourse on trauma healing in profound ways.”

–Ronald P.M.H. Lay, MA, AThR, ATR-BC, registered and credentialed art therapist and supervisor and program leader of masters in art therapy program at the LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore

“To read this book is to watch a master at work. As In Trauma Healing at the Clay Field, Cornelia Elbrecht charts new territory in neurobiologically informed trauma treatment. Her decades of experience as a sensorimotor art therapist are rooted in the understanding that no psychological process can be experienced separately from the body. Blending extensive knowledge of current science with years of mastery in ancient and modern body-based movement meditation and healing, the author presents guided drawing activities for application with clients. Those of us working with bilateral drawing, writing, and body mapping owe Elbrecht a special debt. She greatly deepens our intuitive understanding of how and why these whole-brain, whole-body methods are so effective while expanding our repertoire of tools. Illuminated by deeply moving case studies, this handbook is a must read for expressive therapists, trauma treatment specialists, and holistic practitioners, The author’s wisdom, experience, and inspiration shine through on every page.”

– Lucia Cappacione, PhD, ATR, REAT, author of The Power of Your Other Hand and Recovery of Your Inner Child and director of the Creative Journal Expressive Arts Certification Training Program

“This wonderful useful and inspiring book takes at its foundation the idea that guided drawing can be curative and that an understanding of the body, mark making, rhythm of movement, and archetypal forms can underpin this. Can it be so simple that by using repetitive shapes with eyes closed and with a concentration on movement, rhythm, and repetition one can find within themselves a way forward? This is the question that formed as I read this book. It offers a unique combination of explanatory discourse, personal experience, and practical examples concerning guided drawing."

– Jean Bennett, lecturer on creative expressive therapies and art therapy at the University of Derby, UK

“In Healing Trauma with Guided Drawing, Cornelia Elbrecht manages to weave in her lifelong professional experience and trainings with emerging research evidence on trauma and the body. Neuroscience has opened a new horizon for trauma work, deepening our understanding of the relationship between body, brain, and emotions. Elbrecht’s book is a much welcome and significant contribution to this field as it introduces an art therapy-specific approach. She generously shares her wealth of experience. Theory and descriptions of practical exercises are well integrated, and case examples make this book lively and engaging. Elbrecht’s life experience underpins the richness of her work and her caring and compassionate approach toward clients who have experienced trauma.”

– Val Huet, PhD, CEO of the British Association of Art Therapists BAAT

Trauma Healing at the Clay Field

A Sensorimotor Approach to Art Therapy

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht; Foreword by Cathy Malchiodi PhD North Atlantic Books 2021, Berkeley California

 

Purchase from: 
Cornelia ElbrechtJessica Kingsley PublishersAmazon,  Footprint Australia

Using clay in therapy taps into the most fundamental of human experiences - touch. This book is a comprehensive step-by-step training manual that covers all aspects of 'Work at the Clay Field', a sensorimotor-based art therapy technique.

Trauma Healing at the Clay Field has been translated into Korean, Russian and a Spanish edition is under way.

Read more The book discusses the setting and processes of the approach, provides an overview of the core stages of Gestalt Formation and the Nine Situations model within this context, and demonstrates how this unique focus on the sense of touch and the movement of the hands is particularly effective for trauma healing in adults and children. The intense tactile experience of working with clay allows the therapist to work through early attachment issues, developmental setbacks and traumatic events with the client in a primarily nonverbal way using a body-focused approach. The kinaesthetic motor action of the hands combined with sensory perception can lead to a profound sense of resolution with lasting therapeutic benefits. With photographs and informative case studies throughout, this book will be a valuable resource for art therapists and mental health professionals, and will also be of interest to complementary therapists and bodyworkers. Trauma Healing at the Clay Field has been translated into Korean, Russian and a Spanish edition is under way.

The Transformation Journey

The Process of Guided Drawing – An Initiatic Art Therapy

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht; Foreword by Cathy Malchiodi PhD North Atlantic Books 2021, Berkeley California

 

Purchase from: 
Amazon, Barnes & NoblesFootprint Australia and others

Rhythmic bilateral repetition is used to express muscular tension, pain and emotions. Clients then, with an almost massage-like approach, find movements that soothe the pain, discharge inner tension and repair boundary breaches. Simple archetypal shapes, meanwhile, offer invaluable non-verbal intervention tools to the therapists.

Cornelia has also contributed to several books and publications.

Handbook of Expressive Arts Therapy

Bilateral Body Mapping with Guided Drawing

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht (Chapter 13)

Edited by: Cathy Malchiodi
The Guildford Press 2022

Creative Interventions with Traumatized Children

The Clay Field and Developmental Trauma in Children

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht (Chapter 9)

Edited by: Cathy Malchiodi
The Guildford Press 2015, New York

Inscape: International Journal of Art Therapy

Being Touched Through Touch: Trauma Treatment Through Haptic Perception at the Clay Field: A Sensorimotor Art Therapy

Authors: Cornelia Elbrecht and Liz Antcliff

Published by Routledge / Taylor & Francis Group and The British Association of Art Therapists

Volume 19, 2014 – Issue 1: Art Therapy and Neuroscience

Article available for purchase from the publishers.

 

Australian Childhood Foundation Journal

Being in touch: Healing developmental and attachment trauma at the Clay Field

Authors: Cornelia Elbrecht and Liz Antcliff

Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

Volume 40, Issue 3, September 2015 - Interpreting neuroscience, creating evidence - a collection of Australian based trauma informed research and practice

Article available for purchase from the publisher.

Healing Trauma with Guided Drawing

A Sensorimotor Art Therapy Approach to Bilateral Body Mapping: Chinese Language Translation 2019

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht; Foreword by Cathy Malchiodi PhD North Atlantic Books 2019, Berkeley California

Purchase from: 
[email protected]

This is the Mandarin language version of Healing Trauma with Guided Drawing.

Die Wandlungsreise

Der Prozess des Geführten Zeichnens, eine initiatische Kunsttherapie

Author: Cornelia Elbrecht
Johanna Nordländer Verlag 2011, Todtmoos-Rütte

This is the German language version of The Transformation Journey.