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The Wartegg drawing completion test

Irantzu Olabarrieta

Created on February 3, 2024

Projective drawing

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Transcript

Projective drawing

Let¨s have a go!!!

You will be given this sheet, what do you have to do?

Info

process

These are the steps you have to take:

Take some time quietly to draw a picture in each of the six panels of the paper

Step 1

Try to incorporate the lines and shapes already in five of them.

Step 2

Draw anything you like in the blank square

Step 3

Once you have finish drawing all of them, give a title to each.

Step 4

Wavy line

This motif has to do with your emotional life. Are you floating on or above the waves, or are you sinking bellow them?

Corner Square

This square is an architectural unit; your response here relates to your feelings about your house/home. It may have implications with aspects of your identity.

Circle

This drawing relates to your sense of self. You may have been assertive or tentative (drawn a face, coloured in the circle..)or you may have suggested that there are preassures from outside the circle of your self.

cut off corner

This will reveal how you relate to your friends, who are at once part of you and separate from you.

two lines

The two lines stand for the inescapable dualism of the universe, especially the duality of sex. You may have just revealed your deepest feelings about love.

blank space

Your whole life is revealed in this space. Without prompt or guideline you have revealed your innermost self

The wartegg drawing completion test

The Wartegg Drawing Completion Test (WDCT) was created by the German psychologist Ehrig Wartegg (1897-1983), a follower of the School of Gestalt psychology in Leipzig that was the main centre of the psychology of totality. The WDCT derives from the Sander Phantasie Test (Berger, 1939) and, as reported by Roivanen (2009), was published for the first time in 1926, even though a complete handbook saw the light only many years later (Wartegg, 1953).

Errubrika

Excellent

Very good

Acceptable

Poor

It´s time to reflect on the outcome