“…Art was assumed to provide experiences that stimulate emotional learning and to be beneficial in teaching students self‐awareness, self‐discovery and personal growth on their way to becoming professionals. In addition to the intrinsic value of personal growth and insight, the use of art in this group of studies is also described as creating space in which to discuss and process difficult and often suppressed aspects of being a physician, such as dealing with death and dying, suffering, one's mistakes and own vulnerabilities, and medicine's limitations . Thus, many papers in this grouping describe art as having emancipatory goals and as providing a means of equipping students with the emotional resilience they require to better face systematic problems, including physician burnout, stress and decreasing empathy.…”