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So most people are familiar with the idea that Vincent Van Gogh had mental illness.
Different camps so to speak of mental illness almost like to claim Van Gogh as their own.
So groups say, you know, oh he had schizophrenia. He had bipolar disorder. I would argue that
Van Gogh who clearly had documented certain symptoms which ranged from being high irritable
and at the same time what’s called very sticky. Stickiness is a psychiatric term which
means you bond to people and sort of cling on and keep engaging with them in a very,
very intense way. But when someone is both sticky and irritable it causes what happened
to Van Gogh which is he would make these intense relationships with his brother for example,
with Gaugin. So certain artists and with women that wouldn’t necessarily be suitable women
for him. And at the same time he would then have these tremendous arguments and fights
with them. So they were chaotic relationships and they were I’m very close, no I can’t
have anything to do with you that really reeked terrible havoc in his life. In addition to
those two symptoms he also suffered with extreme depression at various times, real mood lability.
So sometimes he was intensely depressed. Other times he was seemingly more up.
And those go together along with something very interesting which is his paintings. So
in his paintings we see intense color and a difference in terms of paintings that proceeded
it which were more realistic. His paintings have this more abstract quality almost in
some ways like a nightmarish quality to them. And that makes you think about again what
was going on in his mind that he produced something like that. If you look at all of
those qualities you think about temporal lobe epilepsy. Temporal lobe epilepsy is not like
other forms of epilepsy where you have a seizure happen that you can see because it’s happening
in the temporal lobe which is an emotional center of the brain. So that symptoms of temporal
lobe epilepsy are this mood lability, stickiness, irritability, irascibility and so being a
frustrating person and visual hallucinations. So seeing visually in your own mind intensities
of color, heightened sensory visual stimuli like this essentially Starry Night or, you
know, something that looked very dramatic, impressionistic. Or even visual hallucinations
that alter what someone else looks like. So people who have temporal lobe epilepsy might
look at your face and see distortions.
And of course when we look at some of Van Gogh’s paintings you often do see such distortions.
The interesting thing is that ultimately when he was hospitalized in Remy the doctor actually
thought he did have epilepsy and treated him for epilepsy. So there was even knowledge
at that time that there could be this kind of illness causing his problems. And in fact
this all fits with the time periods during which he becomes most ill which is when he
would drink absinth. Absinth was an alcohol that was very in during various periods of
Van Gogh’s life and it has a very high pure alcohol content which lowers the seizure threshold
in the brain. So people who have epilepsy have to stay away from alcohol and are usually
medicated with something that lower the seizure threshold of the brain. If one would drink
absinth and have temporal lobe epilepsy you would expect a real rise in the amount of
activity going on and more illness to the point even of being psychotic which did ultimately
happen to Van Gogh in the incident where he had this big blow up with another artist and
hurt his ear, you know, cut off a piece of his ear and so on. So these things, these
pieces all essentially fit together to create this picture that is a likely diagnosis. Again
one can never 100 percent retrospectively diagnose someone but these would all fit with
temporal lobe epilepsy and they would also explain what might have informed some of Van
Gogh’s work. And no doubt he is a brilliant, was a brilliant artist but some of his work
may have been informed actually by his illness and that is what we see today.