Art Therapist | Peer Supervisor/Worker

Artist | Lived Experience Consultant

Current Offerings

Lucy spends her time working with multiple communities in Melbourne, Victoria. She is an Art Therapist, Peer Worker and Supervisor at Rainbow Muse Collective, a collective based in Ferntree Gully and Warburton that offers art therapy, child-centred play therapy and animal assisted therapy with an ongoing focus and commitment to decolonizing therapy practices and wellness spaces.

Lucy is an artist and art therapist whose practice is deeply informed by her lived experience navigating the mental health system and a profound belief in the transformative power of creative expression and community connection. As a white practitioner who acknowledges the privileges this identity carries, she bring a critical lens to how colonisation and late-stage capitalism have shaped our current mental health frameworks, often to the detriment of genuine healing and wellbeing.

Her journey through institutional healthcare settings sparked a commitment to reimagining how mental health support can be delivered with greater humanity and understanding. After discovering the healing potential of art therapy firsthand, she completed a Master's degree in Creative Arts Therapy and now works successfully with clients using arts-based therapeutic approaches. Her practice is grounded in fostering supportive therapeutic relationships and creating spaces where creativity and authentic connection can flourish.

An accomplished visual artist working primarily in drawing, painting, and fibre arts, Lucy's artistic practice explores themes of reflection, resilience, and transformation. Her embroidery work has been particularly noted, though her creative practice continues to evolve alongside her therapeutic work.

Having experienced firsthand the inaccessibility of traditional academic systems, which have historically privileged certain ways of thinking and expressing knowledge while excluding others through sexist, racist and ableist structures, Lucy is committed to arts-based research methodologies that honour diverse ways of knowing and communicating. Her personal experience with the limitations and exclusionary nature of conventional academic language has strengthened her dedication to expanding how knowledge can be created and shared through artistic practice.

Lucy is currently developing research interests around systemic reform in mental health care, accessibility in therapeutic settings, and the role of creativity and community in healing. Her perspective on necessary changes within institutional frameworks is informed by both her professional experience and her understanding of how systemic forces and social structures impact mental health. She advocateโ€™s for approaches that centre human connection, creativity, and community support as essential elements of wellbeing.