If you are talking about an undergraduate degree, it is a good start, but I think a graduate degree, if not a doctorate, is required to begin to reach a certain level of subtlety and understanding in any therapeutic work. Depending on what exactly you mean by "concentration in art therapy," you may or may not get a clear idea of what art therapy entails. Also, the depth of your own involvement in the creative process (how much time you spend actually making art) is at least as equally important as your academic ushering into art therapy.
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