The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of art therapy on the impact of event, anxiety, and somatic symptoms of women with fire traumatic experience. The subject of this study was a 23-year- old woman. The study period was from January 28, 2018, to December 30, 2018, and included a total of 50 sessions, with one to two sessions per week for 50 minutes per session. The results were measured using the Korean version of the Impact of Events Scale and, the Korean version of the Beck Anxiety Scale, and the somatic symptoms scale was used as the Adult Self Report scale. Data analysis was conducted to compare the pre-, post-, and follow-up test scores for the impact of events, anxiety, and somatic symptoms. Collectively, the results showed that art therapy was found to affect the impact of events, the anxiety, and the somatic symptoms of women with fire traumatic experience. This study targeted women with chronic trauma with risk factors that increase the likelihood of trauma, and the study is meaningful in that it deals with somatization symptoms caused by fire and the resulting psychological trauma, such as anxiety.