The Effects of Diseases, Drugs, and Chemicals on the Creativity and Productivity of Famous Sculptors, Classic Painters, Classic Music Composers, and Authors
| Ed. Note: Paul L. Wolf, MD from the Department of Pathology and
Laboratory Medicine at the University of California, San Diego, in a
recently published article (Archives of Pathology and Laboratory
Medicine: Vol. 129, No. 11, pp. 1457-1464. November 2005) takes us
on a journey of retrograde analysis of medical conditions and
self-induced medicinal ingestion that afflicted some of the most
talented artists ever (Benvenuto Cellini, Michelangelo Buonarroti,
Ivar Arosenius, Edvard Munch, van Gogh, and Berlioz). His
conclusion: these talents could have been diagnosed and treated by
today's methods, but the intervention may have dimmed or
extinguished the "spark".
Below is the analysis that Dr. Wolf uses to illustrate his
historical perspective. |
Paul L. Wolf, MD
From the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University
of California, San Diego, and the Autopsy and Hematology, Clinical Chemistry
Laboratories, VA Medical Center, San Diego, Calif
Context.—Many myths, theories, and speculations exist as to the
exact etiology of the diseases,
drugs, and chemicals that affected the
creativity and productivity of famous sculptors, classic painters, classic
music composers, and authors.
Objective.—To emphasize the importance of a modern clinical
chemistry laboratory and hematology coagulation laboratory in interpreting
the basis for the
creativity and productivity of various artists.
Design.—This investigation analyzed the lives of famous artists,
including classical sculptor Benvenuto Cellini; classical sculptor and
painter Michelangelo Buonarroti; classic painters
Ivar Arosenius, Edvard
Munch, and Vincent Van Gogh; classic music composer
Louis Hector Berlioz;
and English essayist Thomas De Quincey. The analysis includes their
illnesses, their famous artistic works, and the modern clinical chemistry,
toxicology, and hematology coagulation tests that would have been important
in the diagnosis and treatment of their diseases.
Conclusions.—The associations between illness and art may be close
and many because of both the actual physical limitations of the artists and
their mental adaptation to disease. Although they were ill, many continued
to be productive. If modern clinical chemistry, toxicology, and hematology
coagulation laboratories had existed during the lifetimes of these various
well-known individuals, clinical laboratories might have unraveled the
mysteries of their afflictions. The illnesses these people endured probably
could have been ascertained and perhaps treated. Diseases, drugs, and
chemicals may have influenced their creativity and productivity.
The phrase “the inhumanity of medicine” has been used by Sir David
Weatherall, Oxford's Regius Professor of Medicine, for a kind of sickness in
modern technological medicine.1 In 1919, one of his predecessors, Sir
William Osler, had the remedy for that complaint. Osler suggested that the
“arts” secrete materials that do for society what the thyroid does for human
beings. The arts, including literature, music, painting, and sculpture, are
the hormones that enhance an increased human approach to the medical
profession.2,3
Illness has affected the artistic achievement of musical composers,
classical painters, creative authors, and sculptors. Illness affected their
physical and mental status as well. Their inspiration may have been shaped
by their human condition. The associations between illness and art may be
close and many because of both the actual physical limitations of the
artists and their mental adaptation to disease. Although they were ill, many
continued to be productive. The afflictions these people endured probably
could have been ascertained and perhaps treated with modern medical
techniques.
This article analyzes the effects of drugs, chemicals, and diseases on
the creativity and productivity of the famous sculptors Benvenuto Cellini
and Michelangelo Buonarroti; classic painters Ivar Arosenius, Edvard Munch,
Vincent van Gogh, and Michelangelo; classic music composer Louis Hector
Berlioz; and author Thomas De Quincey.
Continue to Benvenuto Cellini
references ~ commencement
Last updated: 12/05
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