Michal Wimmer

The Complete Guide to Children's Drawings: Accessing Children‘s Emotional World through their Artwork


Скачать книгу

noted that although in its basis yellow is a peaceful and joyful color, which gives a sense of warmth, when it becomes soiled, it gives a sense of nausea and discomfort. Kandinsky referred to yellow as an earthly color without any depth, which gives a feeling of restlessness, anger and jealousy.

      When children use yellow in their drawings, it represents sensitivity. These children are well aware of their surrounding and deeply influenced by it. They are characterized by cleverness and patience, as well as joyfulness and mischief, but tend not to be troublemakers like children who use red. In addition, they are connected to their family and do not need many friends to find interest, because they have a rich inner world. They are also characterized by high concentration ability and a desire to experience, while taking the right precautions.

      Exaggerated use of yellow represents oversensitivity which makes it difficult for the children to manage outside the inner circle of their loving family. When the child swamps the page with yellow, this also connotes naivety, innocence and empathy with other people’s pain.

B_5.JPG

      Figure 2-6:Excessive use of yellow

      This drawing was made by a 5½ year-old girl who desperately needs family closeness. Her family relocated to a new dwelling and she was about to enter first grade in a new school, without any of her old friends. As a result, this period was characterized by dependence, sensitivity and a strong need for support and reinforcements.

      Pink

      As expected, pink is most commonly used by girls. At a certain age this color dominates their world and they dress in pink clothes, play with pink toys, sleep on pink sheets and dream pink dreams. Although some boys also show interest in this color and add pink to their drawings, this color is commonly identified with femininity. Women who are attracted to stereotypically feminine jobs, and who adopt behaviors considered feminine, such as makeup, body care and fashion, tend to use it.

      Many parents look at their girl when she is at this pink stage, smile and say that she is a little lady. This girl imitates dress codes of older women, but does it in an extreme and grotesque way, so some parents cannot bear it anymore. Beside her obsession with her appearance, she also adopts the mannerisms of older women, giving orders and bossing other children. Often she would find a boy who will be willing to kowtow to her every whim.

      In children’s drawings, pink refers to pleasing. Such behavior is common and normal at ages 5–7, but at older ages, a child who uses pink excessively may be characterized as having a strong need to please others, willfulness and a sense of esthetics.

      Blue

      Unlike pink, which is associated with femininity, blue is associated with masculinity. Blue is also associated with royalty and divinity. In ancient Egypt blue symbolized protection against evil, with the Pharaohs wearing blue clothes. In India, blue symbolizes the creation of the universe and divine wisdom, and the Buddha’s body is often painted blue.

      In nature, there is a lizard which can change its head’s color to blue during sexual excitation periods. Toads see blue as water and a safe haven, hurrying to reach it in time of danger. Tamed chicks also associate blue with safety, so they tend to follow a blue figure.

      In western civilization, especially in the US, brides traditionally wear a blue accessory as a sign of eternal love. On the other hand, blue is also associated with sadness and glumness, as in the blues musical genre.

      Blue is also associated in the western world with the working class, as in the term “blue collar” worker. Some experts recommend wearing blue shirts to job interviews, because blue has a good and soothing effect on the interviewer. Blue affects our nervous system and causes a decrease in breathing rate and blood pressure.

      Lüscher associated blue with tranquility and content, as well as a need to be physically or emotionally relaxed. Psychologically, blue represents the tendency to be sensitive and easily offended. According to Lüscher, blue symbolizes the relationships a person has with his surroundings and his sense of belonging.

      Goethe differentiated between the various blue hues. On one end of the scale, it gives us a cold impression, and on the other reminds us of a pleasant shade. Kandinsky referred to blue as a color which creates a sense of loneliness, melancholy and daydreaming.

      In children’s drawings blue represents relaxation and calm behavior patterns. Children who tend to use blue in their drawings will search quiet social interactions and will try to achieve harmony and pleasant atmosphere in their relationships with others. In their family relationships these children behave logically, demanding logical explanations and refusing to accept answers such as: “Because I said so...”. Children who tend to use blue are also characterized by a rich inner world, and it is important for them to express it.

      Exaggerated use of blue represents cold, distant and restrained communication. It may also symbolize the child’s lack of confidence, oversensitivity, vulnerability and even his tendency to suppress his feelings.

Image764.PNG

      Figure 2-7:Excessive use of blue

      The following example was made by a 4½ year-old child whose parents contacted me because he had social and emotional difficulties. One of the issues that concerned them was that he didn’t have many friends at kindergarten because he was offended easily and when he met them in the afternoon, he insisted they meet only at his home. The excessive use of blue in his drawings represented his restrained communication pattern and social difficulties, as well as his low self-confidence and vulnerability.

      You should note, however, the amount of blue used in the child’s drawing as well as graphic indicators in it. The parents of the child who made the next drawing contacted me because his kindergarten teacher reported that he was having a hard time, which made him nervous and caused him to beat other children.

      The boy’s decision to use blue in this drawing is very clear, as it is spread over the entire page. In addition, he draws in an angular line, rapid movement and various pressure levels.

B_6.JPG

      Figure 2-8:Extreme use of blue, combined with rigid, fast line movement and variable pressure level

      Integrating all these factors indicates that this child has some emotional difficulty, which he tries to overcome by using the cold and relaxing blue. In other words, blue was used in this case to compensate for fears and anxieties that the child has but are unspoken, yet causing his unpleasantly distancing behavior, which is expressed either actively (aggression), or passively (withdrawal or detachment).

      Purple

      Queen Cleopatra of ancient Egypt loved purple. She loved it so much she forced her servants to immerse 20,000 snails for 10 days, so that they would secrete enough purple mucus. In Christianity, the pope and cardinals wear purple – perhaps the most expensive dye in the pre-modern world.

      In human color psychology, purple is considered symbolic of royalty, nobility and gift. In one of his letters, Leonardo da Vinci wrote that he found meditation to be ten times more powerful when performed in a purple-colored room or under purple light. Similarly, Wagner used to compose his operas in a purple room which he called “my inspiration room”.

      Lüscher described studies that associate purple with emotional and mental immaturity. In his opinion, preferring purple represents emotional fears, which cause people to create an imaginary world, while ignoring their surroundings. Such perception of the world as an imaginary place matches children’s natural view. In other words, purple is associated with escapism, usually caused by hidden anger or sadness. Another meaning purple has in our culture is the wish to charm others. Kandinsky noted that purple is created when red withdraws into blue. Therefore, purple is more related to blue in its meaning and associates with sadness and distance.

      In children’s drawings purple is symbolic of imagination and intuitions. These children demand others to be particularly patient with them and are