Themed Issue: Precision Medicine and Personalised Healthcare in Psychiatry
“One of those days” by Jess de Zilva
© Jess de Zilva
Greatly inspired by Valentin de Boulogne's version of the `the last supper' I had been plotting a painting for over a year. It was going to be a painting, not of the last supper, but of the early morning after the party. Then the pandemic and the first lockdown hit. I realized I would not be able to execute the idea as I had planned and so ‘the morning after' morphed into this painting I named ‘One of those days'. Not being able to work with models, all the protagonists in this painting are one and the same person. It still deals with how we are with our fellow people, the breakdown of social rules, behaviour otherwise not laid bare and thresholds being lowered, except in this painting it has turned inwards. How do we deal with ourselves when being faced and maybe even stuck with ourselves? The many facets of our personality come out to play; the good, the bad and the ugly. One of those days is one of the many indistinguishable days stuck in four walls with one's self.
Jess de Zilva is a London based painter of psychological allegories.
She takes our confusion and doubt and mirrors them back at us as painted stories. In her oil paintings she combines figures' poses and expressions, backdrops and symbolic objects, creating psychological allegories that always leave space for the viewer to wonder.
De Zilva's style is best described as psychological realism: “I'm interested in what underpins our actions and thoughts, how context influence us. My paintings are psychological so they can be visually dreamlike, but the feelings they express are dead real. I paint in a realist manner to bring some reality and seriousness to a subject that cannot be seen or touched and is difficult to describe.”
The painted figures in her works are portraits of real people yet the stories are not about specific people; Jess hopes there is a piece of everyone reflected in her works.
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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- 31 March 2022, p. A15
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Editorial
Five points to consider when reading a translational machine-learning paper
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- 31 March 2022, pp. 169-171
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Towards personalised predictive psychiatry in clinical practice: an ethical perspective
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- 07 March 2022, pp. 172-174
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Analysis
The potential of precision psychiatry: what is in reach?
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- 31 March 2022, pp. 175-178
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Review
Prediction models in first-episode psychosis: systematic review and critical appraisal
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- 24 January 2022, pp. 179-191
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Paper
Predicting patients who will drop out of out-patient psychotherapy using machine learning algorithms
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- 18 February 2022, pp. 192-201
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Deep learning identifies robust gender differences in functional brain organization and their dissociable links to clinical symptoms in autism
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- 15 February 2022, pp. 202-209
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Classification of suicidal thoughts and behaviour in children: results from penalised logistic regression analyses in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study
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- 09 February 2022, pp. 210-218
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Using polygenic scores and clinical data for bipolar disorder patient stratification and lithium response prediction: machine learning approach
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- 28 February 2022, pp. 219-228
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Using combined environmental–clinical classification models to predict role functioning outcome in clinical high-risk states for psychosis and recent-onset depression
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- 14 February 2022, pp. 229-245
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Correspondence
Safety planning-type interventions for suicide prevention: meta-analysis
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- 31 March 2022, p. 246
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Authors' reply
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- 31 March 2022, p. 246
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Book Review
The Gallery of Miracles and Madness: Insanity, Modernism, and Hitler's War on Art By Charlie English William Collins. 2021. £20.00 (hb). 336 pp. ISBN 9780008299620
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- 31 March 2022, p. 247
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Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope
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- 31 March 2022, pp. 249-250
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Extra
Auschwitz: dreaming the nightmare of day – Dr Miklós Nyiszli (A-8450) – Extra
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- 31 March 2022, p. 209
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Auschwitz: 2. Children – Extra
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- 31 March 2022, p. 245
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Front Cover (OFC, IFC) and matter
BJP volume 220 issue 4 Cover and Front matter
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- 31 March 2022, pp. f1-f3
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Back Cover (IBC, OBC) and matter
BJP volume 220 issue 4 Cover and Back matter
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- 31 March 2022, p. b1
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