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Psychiatry in pictures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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Abstract

Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2001 

Broach Schizophrene

The paintings of Brian Charnley (1949-1991) are now widely known, particularly his final sequence of pictures, painted while he took himself off medication in order to experience his schizophrenia in an unadulterated form, which culminated in his suicide. Broach Schizophrene formed part of his portrayal of his own personal experience of his illness. In an ‘Artist's statement’ to accompany his pictures, he wrote in 1988: “ Sigmund Freud, commenting on his work on the mind, said that wherever he had been, an artist or poet had been there before him. I hope, to some extent, my work might exist in a similar way. I try to avoid being too direct about the privations suffered as a schizophrene and try instead for more oblique poetic metaphors as I feel the truth can be more nearly approached this way. My work is also a much needed form of exorcism. Apart from my pictures, I regard my illness as completely negative, involving the sufferer in a vicious downward spiral. Current medical practice attempts to suppress both the patient and his symptoms, convenient but evasive. My paintings stand as an attempt to penetrate this wall of silence and I hope they can throw some light on a condition which has largely eluded medical science”.

References

2001: A Mind Odyssey is a celebration of the arts, psychiatry and the mind. For further information see http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/campaigns/2001/ or e-mail: awedderburn@rcpsych.ac.uk

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