“…There are a number of similar Winnicottian approaches to using art as a response. For example, in Italy a form of responsive art has been developed that stems from the American art therapist Arthur Robbins (1998), which draws upon interactive art making (Belfiore & Cagnoletta, 1992). In France the art therapist Leclerc, coming from a psychoanalytic perspective, uses 'response-art', which expands on the use of counter-transference (Leclerc, 2013).…”