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Vincent van Gogh and mental illness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Arabinda Narayan Chowdhury*
Affiliation:
Stuart Road Clinic, Northamptonshire NHS Trust, Corby, Northants NN17 1RJ, UK. Email: arabinda.chowdhury@btinternet.com
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2008 

Many thanks to the Journal for printing Vincent van Gogh's work on Dr Felix Rey 1 and honouring this genius artist who despite his episodic mental illness creatively contributed to the repertoire of impressionist art. But I wonder why this painting was chosen? I think a different choice could have been more meaningful. Three medical doctors were involved with the treatment of van Gough: Dr Felix Rey (1867–1932), who diagnosed van Gogh's epilepsy; Dr Théophile Zacharie Auguste Peyron (1827–95) of Saint-Remy asylum who also diagnosed ‘a type of epilepsy’ – he was a very understanding physician who arranged facilities within the asylum for van Gogh's paintings and artwork; and Dr Paul Gachet (1828–1909) who treated van Gogh during his last 10 weeks of life.

van Gogh painted two portraits and an etching of Dr Gachet, one of which (Portrait of Doctor Gachet, June 1890) was auctioned in 1990 for an astounding sum of US$ 82.5 million. Young intern Dr Rey probably maintained distance because he saw van Gogh during his psychotic state, shortly after the ear mutilation episode. He failed to value the artist's creativity and thus was not possessive of the gift presented to him, which he described afterwards:

‘Vincent was above all a miserable, wretched man,… he would talk to me about complementary colours. But I really could not understand why red should not be red, and green not green!… When I saw that he outlined my head entirely in green (he had only two main colours, red and green), that he painted my hair and my mustache – I really did not have red hair – in a blazing red on a biting green background, I was simply horrified. What should I do with this present?’ Reference Brauman and Auden2

Dr Gachet was very supportive of van Gogh and valued his creative instinct. Vincent had found a ‘true friend’ in him. It is a matter of pride for the medical fraternity that Dr Gachet was highly admired by van Gogh and that he tried his best to keep van Gogh's tormented soul at peace and allow his creativity to flourish in the village atmosphere of Auvers. van Gogh created a series of paintings, at least 14, illustrating the Saint-Remy asylum. Any of them may be appropriate for the Journal to focus on with regard to his creativity of the use of colour and space to astonishing effect. Those paintings are carrying the historical value of mental health perspectives so far as the asylum culture of his time is concerned.

References

1 Front matter. Portrait of Dr Rey. Br J Psychiatry 2008; 192:(4).Google Scholar
2 Brauman, M. With friends of van Gogh's in Arles. In Van Gogh: A Self-portrait: Letters Revealing his Life as a Painter (selected by Auden, WH): 353–54. New York Graphic Society, 1961.Google Scholar
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