Since the 1960s and 1970s, Western countries have developed integrated art therapy that combines not
only language but also art work into psychotherapy. This is the result of efforts to overcome the limitations of language-based psychotherapy and develop the psychotherapy method effective and diversified. The main
purpose of this study is to present theories and techniques of integrated expression art therapy of body and
language. Particularly, the study focused on Bottom-up and Top-down, which are key technologies of
integrated expression art therapy of body and language. Consequently, participants of 'integrated expression
art therapy' based on method will be encouraged to restore human health, develop
creativity and contribute to their own independent lives. This study will utilize the movement-oriented
expressive arts therapy used atthe Tamalpa Institute in the United States as the representative method of
bodily therapy, and the literary therapy used atthe Fritz Perls Institutein Germany as the representative
method of language therapy. Numerous theories and techniques exist regarding integrating thetwo methods
into thebody-language integrated expressive arts therapythis study aims to conduct research with a focus on
the "top-downand bottom-uporiented" approaches as its core technique. Carl Rogers saw a human being as
a possessor of conscious experiences, a phenomenological being, a person with the potential for
self-realization, and a free individual. The body-language integrated method of expressive arts therapy based
on the top-down and bottom-up oriented approach could help restoring therapy participants to the complete
human beings described by Rogers.