This research project is a critical examination and analysis of existing scholarship on how art therapy impacts racial minority clients. Despite growing racial diversity in Canada’s population, therapy continues to be criticized for being ethnocentric, monocultural, and inherently biased against people of colour. As a result, people of colour tend to underutilize mental health services and terminate therapy at an alarming rate. The main objective of this research is to understand how art therapy can be a beneficial, accessible therapeutic approach for racial minority individuals and communities. This paper will use a theoretical research method to identify prominent themes and problems that visible minority populations face as clients and evaluate how art therapy can address these. This research project will consider scholarship from the fields of art therapy, critical race theory, psychotherapy and social work with a focus on texts related to mental health and social justice informed practice.