Barry Marc Cohen


Barry Marc Cohen is an American art therapist, scholar, event producer, and art collector. He is known for his contribution to the theory and practice of art therapy, both in originating and researching a new assessment technique and in understanding the art of people diagnosed with dissociative disorders. These endeavors have garnered him awards from the American Art Therapy Association and the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation.

Scholar

In 1991, Cohen co-authored Multiple Personality Disorder From the Inside Out, personal accounts of what it means to live with the disorder written by people with the diagnosis. Cohen and his co-authors Esther Giller and Lynn W. were given the Distinguished Service Award by the International Society for the Study of Multiple Personality and Dissociation in 1991 for creating a widely read book for the general audience on a misunderstood disorder.

The Diagnostic Drawing Series

was developed by Barry Cohen and art therapy colleagues . In 1983, Cohen and his colleagues Shira Singer and Anna Reyner were awarded the annual Research Award of the American Art Therapy Association in recognition of the multi-site research design of the DDS. As an assessment tool, the significantly differs from traditional methods of art-based interpretations that have dominated in previous decades. The development of the DDS has purposefully shifted away from interpretive, subjective approaches in hopes of creating a more empirically-based assessment and research tool. In doing so, Cohen and colleagues have demonstrated a relationship between art elements and psychiatric diagnoses.
Cohen is the Director of the DDS Project, an international network of mental health professionals who use the clinically and in research. More than 65 studies related to the Diagnostic Drawing Series have been completed, and many are widely cited in peer-reviewed journals. Studies often address the graphic profiles of groups of subjects diagnosed with various psychiatric disorders—that is, how this group tends to draw which distinguishes them from all other groups.
Cohen established the Diagnostic Drawing Series Archive near Washington, DC as a resource for researchers.

Art therapist

As a teenaged artist, Cohen was mentored by Charles Li Hidley, an expressionist painter who trained in New York and Mexico City. Cohen received a masters degree in art therapy at the University of Louisville in 1979, where his primary influence was pioneer art therapist Janie Rhyne.
In 1989, Cohen founded the Eastern Regional Conference on Trauma, which he chaired and managed in Virginia for its seven-year duration. Two inpatient psychiatric units for the treatment of survivors of trauma, particularly those who were highly dissociative, were co-founded by Cohen and his partners.
In 1995, he co-authored Telling Without Talking: Art as a Window into the World of Multiple Personality Disorder with Carol T. Cox, and the workbook Managing Traumatic Stress Through Art: Drawing from The Center with Mary Barnes and Anita Rankin.
Barry Cohen is the Executive Director of the non-profit organization , established by Judith A. Rubin and Eleanor C. Irwin, which creates and distributes training films and videos on the expressive therapies. In 2010, he convened the annual in New York City as a training opportunity for expressive therapists and other mental health professionals, which also functions to promote the educational efforts of Expressive Media Inc. In 2013, with Eliana Gil, he co-founded the , an annual conference promoting the integration of the expressive arts with play therapy, held just outside of Washington, DC. Since 2017, with Ping Ho, Founder/Director of , he has co-chaired the annual .

Art and antiques

As an art collector, Cohen has loaned artworks to museums such as the Whitney Museum of American Art and Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art, the San Francisco Museum of Craft and Folk Art, The Athenaeum in Alexandria, VA, the Kentucky Folk Life Museum, and the Contemporary Art Center of Virginia. Works from his collection, including those by Red Grooms, Justin McCarthy, Harold Geesaman, Caroline Goe, and Thornton Dial have been published in art catalogues and books.
As an entrepreneur, Cohen created and promoted antiques fairs, including: the York Tailgate Antiques Show/York County Classic Antiques Show, the Center City Antiques Show, Antiques Manhattan, and the Historic Indian & World Tribal Arts show.

Books