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Mandala in Art Therapy

The mandala, a sacred circle from Buddhist and Hindu traditions, has become a major therapeutic tool in art therapy since Carl Jung's work on individuation. Drawn, painted, or colored, it promotes psychic recentering, stress reduction, and self-exploration through a containing circular form.

Mandala in Art Therapy

Presentation

The mandala — from Sanskrit maṇḍala meaning "circle" — is a circular geometric figure organized around a central point, used for millennia in Asian spiritual traditions as a support for meditation and contemplation. Introduced into Western psychology by Carl Gustav Jung in the early 20th century, the mandala has become a recognized therapeutic tool in art therapy, valued for its recentering, containing, and psychic structuring properties.

The circular form of the mandala possesses intrinsic psychological properties. The circle is the most primitive and universal form: it appears spontaneously in children's drawings from age 2-3, before any other geometric shape. It symbolizes totality, completeness, cycle, and protection. In Jungian psychoanalysis, the circle represents the Self, the archetype of psychic totality. Drawing a mandala means symbolically delimiting a protected inner space, organizing psychic chaos around a center, and striving toward the unification of opposites.

Origins and Spiritual Heritage

The mandala appears in numerous spiritual traditions worldwide:

  • Tibetan Buddhist tradition: Tibetan monks create colored sand mandalas (dul-tson-kyil-khor) as meditative practice and spiritual offering. These elaborately constructed mandalas, built grain by grain over days or weeks, are ritually destroyed once completed, teaching the impermanence of all things
  • Hindu tradition: yantras, Hindu geometric mandalas, serve as supports for meditative concentration
  • Christian tradition: Gothic cathedral rose windows are architectural mandalas organizing light and the sacred around a center
  • Native American traditions: the "medicine wheels" are cosmological mandalas organizing four directions, four elements, and four seasons

Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) rediscovered the mandala through his own practice. Between 1916 and 1920, during a deep psychic crisis, he drew daily mandalas in his notebooks (published in the Red Book). He observed that his mandalas' form reflected his psychic state: disorganized during troubled periods, harmonious during peaceful ones. He theorized the mandala as a spontaneous expression of the collective unconscious and a tool for individuation — the process by which an individual integrates different parts of their psyche to reach the totality of the Self.

Types of Mandalas in Art Therapy

Free mandala: the therapist draws a circle and invites the patient to fill it freely. This modality is the therapeutically richest as it allows unconscious material to emerge without constraint. The therapist observes chosen colors, appearing forms, spatial organization, and the presence or absence of a marked center.

Structured mandala (coloring): the patient colors a pre-drawn mandala with geometric patterns. This more directive modality suits inhibited, anxious patients. Neuroscience studies have shown that coloring structured mandalas significantly reduces anxiety levels measured by salivary cortisol, more than coloring non-mandala shapes.

Collective mandala: a large circle is drawn on a shared surface and each group member contributes. This modality explores group dynamics and creates a group transitional object symbolizing unity in diversity.

Three-dimensional mandala: the mandala leaves the two-dimensional plane to become a three-dimensional structure using clay, paper, or natural objects arranged in a circle.

Clinical Applications

  • Anxiety and anxiety disorders: clinical studies confirm the mandala's anxiolytic effect. A meta-analysis reports significant state-anxiety reduction after 20 minutes of mandala coloring, combining meditative concentration, soothing repetition, and circle containment
  • Chronic stress and burnout: the mandala is used in corporate and hospital settings as a stress management tool. Regular practice (15-20 minutes daily) shows effects comparable to short meditation on physiological stress markers
  • ADHD (children and adults): the mandala's structure channels dispersed attention. The circular framework contains agitation and pattern repetition develops sustained concentration
  • Elderly with Alzheimer's disease: simple mandala coloring maintains fine motor skills, stimulates visuomotor coordination, and offers aesthetic pleasure accessible even at advanced disease stages
  • Palliative care: through its spiritual dimension and totality symbolism, the mandala accompanies end-of-life patients in existential review work
  • Addictions: the mandala is used in withdrawal programs as a craving management tool, diverting attention and offering alternative gratification

Session Structure

  1. Space preparation (5 min): calm space, soft music optional, materials arranged within reach, circle pre-drawn or patient invited to draw their own
  2. Initial centering (5-10 min): conscious breathing or mindfulness exercise to connect with inner state
  3. Prompt (3-5 min): free mandala or structured coloring instructions
  4. Creation time (20-40 min): patient creates in silence or with background music while the therapist observes the process
  5. Contemplation (5 min): patient views completed mandala in silence, turns it in different orientations
  6. Verbalization (10-15 min): exchange around the mandala with open questions about title, dominant emotion, surprising elements

Contraindications

  • Patients with pathological perfectionism: the mandala's geometric structure may fuel demands for perfect symmetry and rigid control
  • Patients in acute psychotic episode: the symbolic and archetypal dimension may fuel mystical or grandiose delusions
  • Patients with severe obsessive disorders: the repetitive nature may reinforce compulsive checking and symmetry behaviors
  • Cultural and spiritual caution: the mandala is a sacred object in several traditions — therapists must be sensitive to patients' religious convictions
  • Patients with vertigo or photosensitive epilepsy: certain highly contrasted concentric mandalas may provoke dizziness or trigger seizures

Medical Disclaimer

The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.

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Art therapist

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