The arts most broadly involve creation through any of a number of media (e.g., literature, music, dance, theater, poetry, and painting) that expresses human experience in ways that enable others to relate to or share in that experience. Moving beyond basic entertainment, the arts offer profound and enduring insights about issues as fundamental as what it means to be a human being, what makes life meaningful, the nature of pleasure and pain, and the enduring miracle of birth and mystery of death-in fact, the entire range of human experience. The arts, however, are often perceived as entirely separate from science; their ability to inform theory, training, and interventions within the field of mental health is, with small exceptions (e.g., Farber, 2017;Leonhardt et al., 2015;Roe, 2020), generally left at the level of inspiration. It remains therefore unclear whether, why, and how the disciplines concerned with the study and promotion of psychiatric rehabilitation and recovery could benefit from exposure to writers, musicians, poets, actors, filmmakers, and visual artists, or what exposure to art might enable clinicians to do that could not be done otherwise. In this special issue, we explore what exposure to various forms of art can add to the understanding of human nature, including mental health, and in particular, efforts and ways to advance psychiatric rehabilitation and recovery. While psychiatric rehabilitation is increasingly positioned as a scientific enterprise, we ask whether this field can benefit from lessons learned from the arts. More specifically,