LIGHT FALL - COLOR THERAPY
Color & Mental Health
Alternative therapies are promoted as being able to support scientifically researched treatments for improving physical and mental health.
Color therapy is one of these alternatives that is touted as a way to help people heal, simply by using colors
to affect the person’s mental or physical state.
When trying to find the treatments that are most likely to help an individual achieve recovery from mental health disorders, including addiction, it is important to take into account the research and evidence behind each method. For that reason, exploring the science and understanding behind color theory and color therapy can help an individual determine whether or not it is a relevant or helpful treatment for mental health and mood issues.
Understanding Color Theory
Color theory is the idea that the colors a person is surrounded with can have an effect on the person’s health – whether physical or mental.
Color psychology is based on the idea that the colors a sighted person is exposed to can have an effect on that person’s emotions
and even on the individual’s health.
Benefits of Color Therapy in Healthcare
Color theory is used in a variety of industries to influence the way individuals behave and think in those environments. In healthcare, color theory is used to create environments that feel safe, healing, and inspiring. As discussed by Healthcare Design Magazine, color theory is commonly used in hospital design to encourage:
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Patient healing and motivation
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Facility efficiency and efficacy
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Healthcare staff motivation and efficiency
As an example, hospital settings are often decorated in soothing, cool colors, such as pale blue and green. This is thought to foster a relaxing environment that enables rest, encouraging faster healing.
Color Psychology as Therapy
According to the Art Therapy Blog, the use of color to help people heal goes back to the ancient Greeks, Egyptians, and Chinese, all of whom used color to try to affect the mental states of people through the colors used to decorate rooms, the incorporation of natural colors to induce a calm state, and the use of light to balance mental states. In fact, for at least one condition – seasonal affective disorder, or SAD – research has shown that light therapy can help to mitigate the depression and anxiety caused by the disorder, as referenced by Mayo Clinic.
Similarly, it is believed that different colors can induce specific emotional or mental states that can change mood, the level of anxiety, or the individual’s perception of a situation.
History of Color Therapy
An article in Scientific American discusses the “color cure,” which was first used in a mental asylum at a place called Wards Island in an attempt to cure mental illnesses like depression or melancholy (in bright, red rooms), violent behavior (with calming blue or green), insanity (using purple rooms), or mania (with black rooms).
The results of these color therapies were never fully documented, but various empirical comments note that, for example, red would help a person struggling with melancholy to become more animated and involved in the environment, while pale blue or green would calm someone who was agitated. This is the historical basis behind color therapy, or chromotherapy.
Color Therapy Controversy
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While color therapy is still used in a variety of applications, there is a lot of evidence from research that it doesn’t have the effects attributed to it. For example, according to the Center for Healthcare Design, the effects of color can be subjective based on cultural history and understanding. This can influence the effect that a particular color has on a particular individual, throwing a question on the idea that specific colors have an intrinsic psychological response.
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Nevertheless, color may affect individuals within the cultural context, making the idea of color therapy valid while still requiring it to be based on the individual’s cultural background. More research is required before the validity of color therapy is acknowledged. That said, if an individual feels motivated or encouraged by the use of color therapy, the value of individual impact should not be ignored.
Peter Pitout & Association Épione
Several works from the 'Fields' & 'Ancient Light' series have been donated to the Association Epione.
We are dedicated to promoting art with a purpose.
All profits made from sales of the artworks are given to the association to support patients and families undergoing medical treatment.
Association Epione provides support and a space of well being to patients and their families.
The Domaine Épione in Gers, South of France provides adaptive therapies in a relaxing and regenerating environment.
All works sent with Certificate of Authenticity , Invoice and Declaration of Donation.