Sunday, November 18, 2012

Being Mad and Creative: The Connection between Mental Illness and Brilliance



The major historical and theoretical trends of the history of the idea of a correlation between mental illness and sheer brilliance did not initiate only after the French Revolution.  The controversial connection between insanity and creativity has been an incredible, indescribable phenomenon since the days of Socrates in Greece. 
This academic discussion of the linking commonalities between creativity and mental illness will entail details of the number, and quality of, scientific evidence regarding creative people having a greater likelihood of being diagnosed mentally ill.  More so than non-creative people; and how artists and writers are more likely to be alcoholics, clinically depressed, or commit suicide more so than average citizen. Specifically, within the last few hundred years of Hollywood cinema, celebrities have gained an embarrassingly, unattractive reputations when dealing with illicit drugs and alcohol. 
Celebrities, such as, Robert Downey Jr., Drew Barrymore and now Charlie Sheen have, at one time or another, all been seen publicly in a drunken state.  However, this is not the first dangerous combination of youthful, creative people expressing their inner battle to be sane.  Dr. Arnold M. Ludwig, a psychiatrist at the University of Kentucky Medical Center, compared the mental health of famous twentieth century artist and writers with the mental health of more conservative, traditional professionals.  Ludwig discovered that artists and writers experienced two to three times the rate of psychosis, suicide attempts, mood disorders, and substance abuse than did comparably successful people in business, science, and public life. (Stanger)  Although there was a period of time when being "madness and genius" was considered in style, a cultural trend.  The Age of Romanticism was the era of greatly admired, yet later suspected of dealing with bipolar disorder, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Edgar Allan Poe, Schumann, and Beethoven.  Other note-worthy, mentally ill “creators” include the highly acclaimed Russian author Leo Tolstoy (War and Peace), the Nobel Laureate John Nash, of whom the film A Beautiful Mind was written about and of course there is one of the most widely and commonly known self-mutilating artists, Vincent Van Gogh.  The introduction of The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha in Miguel de Cervantes novel began an escalation in the number of asylums for the insane.  When the story of Quixote was released in the early sixteen hundreds the understanding of the insane was that they are unable to fully contribute as a member of society and therefore were unfit to coexist with the rest of society’s members.  In the textbook, Interpersonal Communication and Human Relationships, authors Knapp and Vangelisti said there is wisdom in belief that the most intolerable form of punishment is isolation (solitary confinement).  Total and complete social exclusion from human contact can leave human beings feeling devoid of satisfying the impulse to express experiences.  Each person has a reservoir of private experiences that at some point must overflow onto others. (Knapp, 1984)  The distinction between the mentally and criminally insane did not come until much later after the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.  All of these examples are considered to be the greatest, the most influential or best works ever, but these tasks were accomplished by people who were considered to think outside-the-box.
Secondly, the research presented in this discussion will highlight the three main points of scientific studies regarding the link between bipolar disorder and creativity.  Individuals with bipolar disorder are not necessarily automatically considered creative people.  Also, usually easily recognizable creative people do not always suffer from mental illnesses or mood disorders.  Or any other mental health challenges for that matter.  There are conflicting ideas about whether mood disorders interfere or promote creativity.  In the 2009 online article The Myth of the Mentally Ill Creative Keith Sawyer called the link between the mentally ill and creative personality traits as a myth.  According to Sawyer there is no solid scientific evidence affirming the correlation.  In fact, Sawyer says there is a large amount of scientific evidence that creativity is more commonly associated with the positive moods of the human existence, with happy and healthy lives.  In Sawyer’s opinion, severe mental illness may actually reduce creativity.  He continued to say that in order to see a connection one must first consider the mentally challenged who are not creative and the creative who are not mentally ill.  Now this point, in particularly, stood out in my mind because of a conversation in the recently released blockbuster film Tropic Thunder between the lead protagonists played by Robert Downey Jr. and Ben Stiller.  Robert Downey Jr.’s character says to Ben Stiller’s character, “You never go full retard” which loosely translated means you never completely let loose control over your mental comprehension. 
On the opposite side of the argument, noted authors Jason L. Hicks and Richard L. Marsh believe "creative activity does involve very regular, cognitive process” and that evidence shows that people use information the same way whether or not they are creating a novel idea or merely accomplishing a non-creative task." (Bink & Marsh, 2001, p. 60)  Bink and Marsh understood, in detail, the cognitive process behind creative thinking.  A website specifically intended to aid individuals living with bipolar disorder, bipolar-lives.com, does openly discuss the side effects of medication and a hindrance to the creative ability.
The findings of an extensive study conducted by Dr. Ludwig and his colleagues resulted in findings proving that “genius does in fact border on insanity, but that people diagnosed with psychological illness cannot be highly creative."  He said, “Studies suggest that creative people often share more personality traits with the mentally ill than “normal” people in less creative pursuits.”  Ludwig also went so far as to trace various types of mental illness to different creative professions: he found that if you're a poet you're more likely to suffer from mania and psychoses; a musician or actor, drug abuse; a composer, artist, or non-fiction writer, alcohol dependence. (Stanger)
Next, let us take the time to discuss the personality traits of creativity in artists versus scientists and the commonly shared personality traits between creative people and the mentally ill, yet considered “normal” people.  There are many similar traits between the creativity that comes from an artistic mind versus the creativity that comes from a scientific mind.  These personality traits begin with, but are not limited to, being open to experience, a strong sense of drive, ambition and the ability to produce literal and physical achievements.  However, the distinguishable differing personality trait in artists includes a certain type impulsiveness that often leads to a lack of the sense of right and wrong.  Artists most commonly exert signs of anxiety, artists are said to be extremely emotionally sensitive sometimes to a point of hostility.  Artists are widely known for nonconforming, being aloof and can often be unfriendly to those who do not share the same perspective as themselves.  The independence exhibited by artists can often be misread as a lack of warmth originated from the imagination of a fantasy-oriented individual.  In an article from the Rochester Institute of Technology entitled, Creative Genius or Psychotic? A Look at the Strong Positive Correlation between Creativity and Psychoses, writer Jonathan S. Byrd says the inclination to fantasize could be equated with having an "overactive imagination".
On the opposite end of the spectrum, the creativity that spawns from scientists is still an attitude of hostility but this time the hostility is derived from a feeling of dominance and arrogance.  It is said that scientific creativity is evident because scientists independently act as their own moral compass; their confidence resides within themselves and their own abilities.  Although, no matter what the motivating factor may be behind the either artistic or scientific “creativity” the entity created, the byproduct of that creativity, can be something wonderful, magnanimous…an apparent innovation for the creator.  Another interesting point to mention is about scientists, although they are said to be more self-absorbed they are also said to be much more flexible in changing the pattern of their thoughts, more so than artists.  
I believe the true divider between artists and scientists is as simple as one word: intelligence.  In the late 1800s tests were developed to point out high levels of intelligence in individuals and again in the nineteenth century intelligence was used as a barometer to promote the individual’s mental property.



The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, most commonly referred to the historically popular Age of Reason or period of Enlightenment, were the leading, distinguishable eras of initial arguments of rationality. The imagination was held as the “key element of human cognition” according to the writings of Thomas Hobbes.  The historical significance of the connection between mental illness and brilliance has been seen in the common, everyday life ever since the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.  In my opinion, the connection between mental illness and brilliance is undeniable.  Especially since teachings of this correlation have been taught since the seventeenth century and has become the understood and accepted rational today.  Even for those who do not believe in the association.  For those of us who were lucky enough to have lived during these two monumental centuries this association has become “common knowledge” that these two are intertwined.
As we [society] have learned more about these creative people and their accomplishments, we have learned something more mental illnesses and how to reach the pinnacle of artistic expression that is admired even until these modern times.
So in effect, Sigmund Freud’s work led to the thought logic progression of the belief that great artistic talent is usually linked to mental illness.  The fact that this holds true in so many of our world renowned great artists has also added to this “understanding and acceptance”.  Recently at a Middle School art fair there was a beautiful painting that stood out from all the other competitors.  When I inquired about the painting; I was told an autistic student had painted it and my response was, “Oh”.  I knew I had to include that in this paper.  I realized that simply saying the student is autistic was the answer to my unasked question. The “Oh” was my acceptance to the response of my unasked question.
The 19th century teachings of Freud aided the thought logic progression that defined what we refer to as, “Genius artistry.”  It was written that: “The phenomenon of transference in the therapeutic relationship, established its central role in the analytic process.”   This is so true.  Sigmund Freud taught us to define the thought process. This logical thought progression is the process commonly used and taught throughout the centuries of our existence. However analyzing within the logical thought process is how we reason and develop thought and understandings and this is all attributable to Freud’s breakdown of the Id, Ego, and Super Ego.
With definitions and understandings of what mental illness is and what brilliance is we can now recognize connections that we perceive.  Most artists that were deeply depressed painted beautiful works of art void of the depression altogether, or works that gave you a new way of looking at the expression of the simplicity of beauty.  It seems that since there is something on the inside that is unhappy these mentally challenged artists produced what was beautiful and happy to them in outward expressions.   It may have been to hide the mental illness, or to do the opposite of what they felt inside.  Some artists look at their work as the “birth” of an artistic piece and some do not want to give birth to what is considered ugly, or something they themselves cannot begin to actually express. They might feel that the feeling within their mental illness is disgusting or grotesque to them. And that could be the reason they did not share their grotesque expressions with the world.  On the other hand, battling mental illness could allow them to be completely self-serving not even aware of the impact their works would have on the world and they simply created what they felt during the time of artistic creation,  and it is just that, no other logic was ever involved.
I really feel that with the works of Salvador Dali.  His works depict a positive and a negative force in competition with each other.  Some of his works are so well depicted that you can literally feel the forces battling to see which one overcomes the other.  Salvador Dali’s works also depict extremes, long noses and extended buttocks on some of his caricatures.  Dali was noted to have commented that, this is his expression of the depression he experiences.  His work has to include the loss of balance because he was without balance in his life.    He said he could not leave this out of his works and feel that he had expressed himself.  His mental illness, or lack of balance as he put it, was an accepted part of him.  Dali seemed to have a sense of peace with the fact that he suffered from mental illness.  He accepted his mental illness as also what defined him as his self.  Dali was definitely described as an outside the box thinker along with so many mental greats of all the past centuries.  
In conclusion, thinking outside the box may possibly be a creative boost in both, a career or personal life.  However, why a correlation between the mentally ill and the creative exists is still being widely researched and may allude to certain points, but nothing can be said for sure. 
The 19th century teachings of Freud aided the thought logic progression that defined what we refer to as, “Genius artistry.”  It was written that: “The phenomenon of transference in the therapeutic relationship, established its central role in the analytic process.”   This is so true.  Sigmund Freud taught us to define the thought process. This logical thought progression is the process commonly used and taught throughout the centuries of our existence. However analyzing within the logical thought process is how we reason and develop thought and understandings and this is all attributable to Freud’s breakdown of the Id, Ego, and Super Ego.
With definitions and understandings of what mental illness is and what brilliance is we can now recognize connections that we perceive.  Most artists that were deeply depressed painted beautiful works of art void of the depression altogether, or works that gave you a new way of looking at the expression of the simplicity of beauty.  It seems that since there is something on the inside that is unhappy these mentally challenged artists produced what was beautiful and happy to them in outward expressions.   It may have been to hide the mental illness, or to do the opposite of what they felt inside.  Some artists look at their work as the “birth” of an artistic piece and some do not want to give birth to what is considered ugly, or something they themselves cannot begin to actually express. They might feel that the feeling within their mental illness is disgusting or grotesque to them. And that could be the reason they did not share their grotesque expressions with the world.  On the other hand, battling mental illness could allow them to be completely self-serving not even aware of the impact their works would have on the world and they simply created what they felt during the time of artistic creation, and it is just that, no other logic was ever involved.
 I really feel that with the works of Salvador Dali.  His works depict a positive and a negative force in competition with each other.  Some of his works are so well depicted that you can literally feel the forces battling to see which one overcomes the other.  Salvador Dali’s works also depict extremes, long noses and extended butts on some of his caricatures.  Dali was noted to have commented that, this is his expression of the depression he experiences.  His work had to include the loss of balance because he was without balance in his life.    He said he could not leave this out of his works and feel that he had expressed himself.  His mental illness, or lack of balance as he put it, was an accepted part of him.  Dali seemed to have a sense of peace with the fact that he suffered from mental illness.  He accepted his mental illness as also what defined him as his self.  Dali was definitely described as an outside the box thinker along with so many mental greats of all the past centuries.  
Many of the Great artists that did struggle with mental illness were also noted for being able to look at things and perceive them differently.  What they saw, and what the average “normal” person saw, was very different, sometimes very simplistic and at times so extremely complicated.  Though it was recognizable it was from a completely different perspective; a perspective that the “normal thinkers” had not considered.  Some of the time working from definitions, and understandings, can cause us to limit our investigations of matters and be content with out truly searching out a matter.  The term,” outside the box” is a phrase used to describe the thinker that does not hold on to the understood without allowing their thoughts to be limited to only what is known and understood, and/or defined.  They are open enough in their thinking to just allow thoughts to proceed beyond what they think they already know, and explore what else it can be , or become.  I feel mentally ill people have the ability to allow their thoughts to just be, or become whatever they are.  They seem to have the ability to quite the analytical thinking, and even the logical thinking, and create without definition or understanding.
Why the link?  I am convinced the link exist because of the mentally ill person has some capabilities of the mind in thoughts that we the “normal” thinkers don’t have.  To create or recreate works that their mind sees, just the way they see them, is what a mentally ill person does and a person without mental illness does the same.  In artistic expressions the mentally ill can only produce what they see in their minds eye.  The link is the sight.  Non-conforming, not understood expressions, but the skew they see in their mind eye vision.  Once translated to a physical work, then we “normal” thinkers can study the concept, use the logical thought progression and incorporate new knowledge into our analytical thinking process and voila, we understand.




Bibliography

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