The British Journal of Psychiatry (2001) 179: 0
© 2001 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatry in pictures
ROBERT HOWARD
2001: A Mind Odyssey is a celebration of the arts, psychiatry and
the mind. For further information see http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/campaigns/2001/
or e-mail: awedderburn@rcpsych.ac.uk
Christmas Cats by Louis Wain (1860-1930) was painted on a ward
mirror at Napsbury Hospital as part of the Christmas decorations. Wain's
humorous drawings of cats and other animals were enormously popular for more
than three decades, but during the First World War he found it increasingly
difficult to get work. Around this time he began to show the first signs of
the mental illness that was to remain with him for the rest of his life. In
1924 he was certified insane and admitted to Springfield Hospital in Tooting,
but was soon moved to Bethlem Hospital where he stayed for 5 years. In 1930 he
was transferred to Napsbury, dying there 9 years later. At Bethlem he was said
to be "full of a mass of fantastic delusions", but was "very
quiet and amenable, with a quaint old world courtesy in his manner". He
remained in much the same state for the remainder of his life. Although he
grew increasingly confused as time wore on, he continued drawing and painting
with all his old skill, giving away many of his pictures to members of the
hospital staff. This painting from the Guttmann-Maclay Collection is now in
the Bethlem Royal Hospital Archives and Museum, Monks Orchard Road, Beckenham,
Kent, along with many more works by Louis Wain. The Museum is open Monday to
Friday 09.30 to 17.00 (Tel: +44 (0)20 8776 4307). A very happy Christmas to
readers of this page and thanks to Patricia Allderidge, Archivist and Curator
at the Museum, for details about
Wain.
,