In this study, do ethical concerns about the client being in a dual relationship make it inappropriate to consider a request for counseling even though the client has a double relationship with the therapist due to the special circumstances and difficulties in the art therapy clinical field? The research started with exploring this question. Accordingly, two researchers, who are fellow art therapists, established a therapeutic client-therapist relationship and tried to identify the meaning of the dual relationship experience while performing art therapy through narrative inquiry. As fellow art therapists, co-researchers, and research participants, Jin and Jung met 12 times over 3 months and experienced client-therapist interaction in a double relationship. Each researcher composed a narrative of her experiences as a client and a therapist through word and picture analyses. Each then found the final research text through the process of reviewing and analyzing each other's narratives. Based on those aspects, the experiences between the two art therapists revealed following: “the therapist is a channel through which the inner voice is transmitted”, “client gains the courage from the therapist's warm gaze”, “the client and therapist both get to learn from each other”, and “therapist becomes a companion”. Based on these contents, the significance and limitations of the study were discussed.