Annual conference 2026: Sustaining care: art therapy for workforce, communities and individuals (in-person ticket)
As burnout rises and health services face growing demand, sustaining care matters more than ever. This conference brings together leading researchers, practitioners and service users to explore how art therapy supports psychological safety for the workforce, community wellbeing and individual recovery.
Annual conference 2026: Sustaining care: art therapy for workforce, communities and individuals (in-person ticket)
As burnout rises and health services face growing demand, sustaining care matters more than ever. This conference brings together leading researchers, practitioners and service users to explore how art therapy supports psychological safety for the workforce, community wellbeing and individual recovery.
This page provides information about in-person tickets. If you would prefer to attend remotely, please see our online ticket option.
What role does art therapy play in sustaining care?
Sustaining care means supporting the conditions in which people, communities and organisations can thrive. Drawing on creative and relational processes, this conference will examine how art therapy contributes to this goal across three interconnected strands:
- Supporting psychological safety and reducing burnout among healthcare professionals
- Building wellbeing and cohesion in communities, including work with marginalised and underserved groups
- Supporting individual people to recover from trauma across the lifespan.
This conference brings together landmark new evidence, including the findings of a major randomised controlled trial, alongside community-based practice and clinical work with individuals, to demonstrate art therapy’s contribution to sustained, compassionate care.
Programme
Opening address by Sonia Kumar, Labour MP for Dudley and a registered physiotherapist.
Keynote presentations
‘Why the arts are the forgotten fifth pillar of health: evidence for individual, community and societal health and wellbeing benefits’ | Daisy Fancourt
What does the science tell us about how arts and cultural engagement shapes our health? Drawing on her work leading the WHO Collaborating Centre on Arts and Health, Professor Daisy Fancourt will present the evidence for how arts engagement builds resilience and supports recovery at individual, community and systems levels.
‘Sustaining those who care: art therapy and healthcare workforce wellbeing’ | Megan Tjasink, principal art therapist and researcher presenting alongside a participant from group art therapy
Megan Tjasink will present findings from a multi-site randomised controlled trial evaluating group art therapy for healthcare professionals. Co-presenting with a doctor who took part in the trial, the keynote will explore what art therapy can offer healthcare workers at risk of burnout.
‘Making art therapy accessible: working with marginalised communities’ | Thahmina Begum, art therapist, presenting alongside a service user from SEND Salaam CIC
Drawing on two decades of community practice across Yorkshire and beyond, Thahmina Begum and a participant from a local community group will share how art therapy can support marginalised communities to process difficult experiences, reclaim their stories and access high-quality, relevant and safe mental health suppport.
Artist’s talk: ‘The Love Booth: art, social history and community cohesion’ | Karen Vost, art therapist and artist
Registered art therapist and Arts Council England funded artist Karen Vost shares The Love Booth, a community arts project using the analogue photobooth to document everyday love, build community cohesion and preserve collective social history. Drawing on her dual identity as artist and art therapist, Karen explores how accessible, participatory artmaking can create belonging and bring diverse communities together.
Parallel sessions
The conference will include a choice of parallel sessions. Confirmed sessions include:
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‘Community-based art psychotherapy in museum settings’ Julia Cort, art therapist, Horniman Museum
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‘Supervision in a changing world: adapting our practice to meet new challenges’ Val Huet, art therapist and visiting professor at University of Hertfordshire & Ulster University
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Art-based practice workshop with Thahmina Begum
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Art-based practice workshop with Megan Tjasink
We are calling for presentations, art-based practice workshops and posters from our members. If you are one of our full members and would like to submit a proposal, you can find out more in the memberzone.
Presentation and workshop submissions
Tickets
Tickets for our annual conference can only be purchased directly from our website.
A limited number of in-person tickets are available, so early booking is advised. In-person ticket bookings will close at 2pm, Sunday 18 October 2026, or when tickets sell out.
Early-bird tickets
We’re offering 10% off ticket prices for the first 100 in-person ticket sales or until 30 June 2026. Early-bird tickets are available to BAAT members only and cannot be used for employer-funded bookings.
Use the discount code at checkout: EARLY10BIRD26
Employer-funded tickets
Employer-funded bookings can be made for in-person or online tickets by completing an invoice request form and sending it to events@baat.org. The deadline for employer-funded bookings is Thursday, 1 October 2026.
Booking information
In early October, in-person ticket holders will be invited to provide dietary and access requirements and a preference for the afternoon parallel session. Please refer to our event terms and conditions or email us at events@baat.org for more information.
Why join in person?
In-person tickets include a light lunch and refreshments throughout the day, giving you time to connect with fellow delegates and continue conversations between sessions.
Joining the conference in person will also give you access to the full conference programme and choice of parallel sessions, allowing you to choose presentations most relevant to your interests and practice.
Can’t join us in person? Join us online!
The conference is also available to attend remotely at a reduced cost.
Frequently asked questions
Bookings for our online Introduction, Foundation, ARTiculate, CPD and Masterclass courses close one week before the start date, at 10.00am.
Joining instructions and materials will be available in your Memberzone, under bookings, once bookings have closed. A reminder email will be sent out to delegates one week before the course.
It is the attendees’ responsibility to check they have access to the joining instructions before the course. Contacting the office on the day or evening before the start date will not always be responded to prior to the course starting.
Employer funded bookings are available for our online Introduction, Foundation, ARTiculate, CPD and Masterclass courses.
These bookings can be made on our website by paying by card at no extra cost. The booking should be made on the delegate’s account as we will need their contact details for the course. If they don’t have an account they can create one for free here. The employer will be required to provide their credit/debit card details to complete the payment. Please also tick the employer funded option at checkout.
If your employer wants to pay by invoice, you will need to complete our Invoice Details Request – Course Booking Form, and return it to us along with a PO number. Please note, we cannot accept the form without a PO number. Please note, there is an additional £20 admin fee for bookings via invoice.
If you need further assistance, please contact us at events@baat.org.
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