Health And Life Through Art

Posted on 11. Sep, 2012 by  in Art TherapyHealth and Nutrition

As what are unarguably the two topics that ultimately drive all human beings, thinking about health and life through art is fascinating as the arts are what us as civilized people tend to prioritize after the basics of being healthy and carrying on living.

Throughout the ages artists have dealt with issues such as disease and death through illness as well as through natural disasters and also by more sinister occurrences. Regardless of an individual’s personal views on dying and what happens afterwards, it is still the topic that preoccupies us as a race most and drives everything we do.

read more …..http://medicalarttherapy.com/health-and-life-through-art/

Great artists with rheumatoid arthritis:

J Clin Rheumatol. 2012 Oct;18(7):376-81. doi: 10.1097/RHU.0b013e3182741ad3.

 what did their disease and coping teach? Part I. Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Alexej von Jawlensky.

Source

Medical School Hannover, Hannover, Germany. henningzeidler@aol.com

Abstract

The famous artists Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) and Alexej von Jawlensky (1864-1941) had rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Both represent an outstanding example of successful coping with RA in former times when treatment was very limited, and these individuals took advantage of creativedisease management. The most popular French impressionist painter Renoir used his creativity to develop his own exercises and assistive equipments for painting despite his disability. Thus, Renoir exemplifies an artistic life altered by RA over more than 25 years that he dedicated entirely to his art and the depiction of beauty and happiness testified by his own words: “The pain passes, but the beauty remains.” Jawlensky, a Russian from origin, was one of the most important expressionist painter active in Germany and the first painter in the 20th century who created extensive series of paintings especially of human faces. From Jawlensky, we learned that his rapidly progressing, late-onset RA induced depression, disability, financial pressure, and social retreat. But the resulting artistic sublimation contributed to the change in his paintings, which we owe the more than 1000 series of the very unique, small-format “Meditations.”For those interested in art, new insight will be opened into the life and work of the artists and increase the appreciation for their contribution to modern art.