
In her therapist work, Vicki specializes in Trauma Recovery, most recently with teens and adults, though she has worked with people whose ages range from three to sixty-three. In a recent bio clip for the Rx Art Reception Fundraiser--which was sponsored by San Antonio's Health and Healing Consortium--Vicki discussed her history with art and her parallel path as an Artist/Healer:
And, of course, Vicki has experienced first-hand the healing power of art and its ability to act as a therapeutic voice or expression for people burdened by a trauma: "art can subtly address
While I have been in practice as an art therapist since 1983, I have been an artist since early childhood. Making art has become such an integral part of me that I can't imagine going very long without "making stuff." In 1977 I received my BFA in Studio Art from the University of Texas at Austin. Then I moved to California where I was active at Clay Dimensions Studio and Many Hands Artists Co-op. My Art has served as a record of my life, an escape from despair, and as a powerful source of personal truth. The creative process is equally essential to my work with clients. While some of them enjoy using traditional media for self-expression, others express their inner images through the "sand-tray" process. For me, watercolor embodies the unpredictability and complexity of life. Whatever the medium, I find the visual creative process to be both compelling and delightful.

issues," she believes, "especially in the beginning when too many emotions confound language--and language is at first too linked to a trauma."
Given her experience and expertise, it is no surprise that Vicki gives her full support to FFF initiatives like the Freese Elementary Special Education Drum Project--which offers creative arts outlets--like painting, sculpture, puppetry, music and dance-- for young, needy students in the San Diego School system.
And as the daughter of Charleen, who instilled in her the "idea that [she] had the freedom to choose [her] own career path," Vicki works tirelessly--along with the rest of the Flood Family Foundation-- to honor her mother's memory and help free all of those suffering from the encumbering complications of Parkinson's. For more information on Vicki L. Williams-Patterson, click here.