A wide shot of a ceramics studio, featuring students working with pottery wheels and other tools.

Katie Kamholz

Assistant Professor, Adjunct

Bio

Education: BFA, 2002, Washington University, St. Louis; MAAT, 2004, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago. Exhibitions: Magical Minds Art Studio, Oak Park; School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago; Art Therapy Studio Chicago, Chicago.

Personal Statement

Katie Kamholz is an art therapist and educator with over fifteen years of experience in a variety of settings. Katie’s art practice, clinical art therapy practice, and pedagogical approach are informed by feminist, relational, and social justice theories, as well as neuroscience theories of development, learning, and attachment.

After graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago with a Master of Arts in Art Therapy (MAAT) in 2004, she spent some time in Milwaukee working with the Bureau of Milwaukee Child Welfare, serving families and children in foster care. In Illinois, Katie has provided art therapy services, as well as supervision and consultation, in adolescent residential treatment care facilities, pediatric inpatient psychiatric care, community mental health, and in Oak Park and Chicago schools.

Since 2014, Katie has taught graduate art therapy students at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the Art Therapy and Counseling department. She has an art therapy and counseling practice in Oak Park where she specializes in issues beginning in childhood and adolescence, family transitions, children involved with child welfare, foster care or adoption, survivors of sexual trauma, developmental trauma and attachment. Katie’s current practice and research interests include developmental and generational trauma, mind/body integrative practices, and attachment theory, development, and repair.

 

Courses

Title Department Catalog Term

Description

This course investigates psychological, sociological, cognitive, cultural and neurobiological approaches to human development. Historical and current theories are examined in light of the implications they have for art therapy theory and practice. Course content addresses the role of the cultural production of personal experience in lifelong development, including how issues of race, ethnicity, class, gender, disability and sexual orientation relate to human development.

Class Number

2132

Credits

3