Volume 217 - Issue 4 - October 2020
No. 1 (Two Figures) by Cynthia Pell © Bethlem Museum of the Mind.
Cynthia Pell was born in 1933 and grew up in north London. Her family were of Jewish background, and the Holocaust became one of the subjects that preoccupied her in later life. She won a national art competition in 1948 and went on to attend Bournemouth and then Camberwell Art Colleges. The only public exhibition that took place during her life time was held at the Beaux Art Gallery in London in 1957. A critic wrote that Cynthia Pell's vision of a doomed society was demonstrated by the anxiety shown in the faces of her subjects. After the exhibition, she destroyed many of her paintings in the street outside the gallery. The destruction of her work and her tendency to give it away became a pattern she would follow in later life.
During the next few years, Cynthia became increasingly depressed and lost weight. In the 1970s, she was admitted to St. Bernard's Hospital, Southall and later to Bexley Hospital, where she was befriended by the art therapist, Britta Von Zweigbergk. Pell's internal turmoil was reflected in her work, some of which show people struggling with depression. The works from this period feature self-portraits and her observations of others in the hospital. She would wander about the hospital at night, making sketches. In the words of the Bethlem Museum of Mind, ‘she became the hospital's unofficial artist-in residence’.
Acknowledgements
Information on Pell is taken from the Bethlem Museum of the Mind, Our Blog. Artist in focus – Cynthia Pell.
We are always looking for interesting and visually appealing images for the cover of the Journal and would welcome suggestions or pictures, which should be sent to Dr Allan Beveridge, British Journal of Psychiatry, 21 Prescot Street, London, E1 8BB, UK or bjp@rcpsych.ac.uk.
Highlights of this issue
Highlights of this issue
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- 28 September 2020, p. A39
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Editorial
History of psychiatry in the curriculum? History is part of life and life is part of history: why psychiatrists need to understand it better
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- 03 April 2020, pp. 535-536
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What should be done to support the mental health of healthcare staff treating COVID-19 patients?
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- 19 May 2020, pp. 537-539
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The scope of mental health research during the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath
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- 04 June 2020, pp. 540-542
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Short report
Abuse, self-harm and suicidal ideation in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic
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- 13 July 2020, pp. 543-546
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Papers
Extremism and common mental illness: cross-sectional community survey of White British and Pakistani men and women living in England
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- 15 March 2019, pp. 547-554
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Ethnic disparities in psychotic experiences explained by area-level syndemic effects
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- 30 October 2019, pp. 555-561
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Female survivors of intimate partner violence and risk of depression, anxiety and serious mental illness
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- 07 June 2019, pp. 562-567
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Trauma-related mortality of patients with severe psychiatric disorders: population-based study from the French national hospital database
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- 20 June 2019, pp. 568-574
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Threat, hostility and violence in childhood and later psychotic disorder: population-based case–control study
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- 11 August 2020, pp. 575-582
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Gang membership and sexual violence: associations with childhood maltreatment and psychiatric morbidity
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- 27 April 2020, pp. 583-590
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Book Review
Neuropsychology of Cognitive Decline: A Developmental Approach to Assessment and Intervention By Holly A. Tuokko and Colette M. Smart Guilford Press. 2018. £40.99 (hb). 387 pp. ISBN 9781462535392
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- 28 September 2020, p. 591
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Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope
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- 28 September 2020, pp. 593-594
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Extras
Medical student – Poem
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- 28 September 2020, p. 539
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Celsus: De medicina – Psychiatry in history
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- 28 September 2020, p. 542
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Front Cover (OFC, IFC) and matter
BJP volume 217 issue 4 Cover and Front matter
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- 28 September 2020, pp. f1-f3
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Back Cover (IBC, OBC) and matter
BJP volume 217 issue 4 Cover and Back matter
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- 28 September 2020, p. b1
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