Title: Life is Short, Art is Long
1Life is Short, Art is Long
- 17th Dr. Sun Yat Sen Oration
- Hong Kong College of Family Physicians
- May 28, 2006
2 as in all the other arts, those who practise
them differ much from one another in dexterity
and knowledge Hippocrates (460-377 BC)
3The Art of Family Medicine
Four Cut Sunflowers, Paris, 1887.
www.vggallery.com
4Mr. Peter Pang
- 25 year-old computer programmer who had been
under my care since the age of 12 - Admitted to ICU because serum potassium was 1.8
mmoles/L - Suspected periodic paralysis complicating
thyrotoxicosis - Signed DAMA form
5Mr. Peter Pang
- He could not understand what the doctor told him
was wrong with him - He was very scared when the doctor told him that
he would be given radioactive iodine - He thought radioactive iodine was the same as
radiotherapy - His main concern was hair loss
6The Art of Listening Speaking
The Sower, Arles, 1888. www.vggallery.com
7Mrs. Nancy Wan
- 48 year-old high school teacher
- Dizziness since an episode of AOM
- Saw more than 10 doctors including ENT surgeons
and neurologists - All investigations including MRI were normal
- Taking atenolol, piracetam, stemetil, librium and
ginko leaves, but still dizzy
8Mrs. Nancy Wan
- Living with husband aged 55 and son aged 20
- Husband recently retired from work as a clerk,
used to be a businessman - Very worried that she could not work because she
was the bread winner - Very afraid of upsetting husband
9The Art of Healing
Harvest at La Crau, Arles, 1888. www.vggallery.com
10Madam Wong
- 55 year-old divorced lady living with son
- Health screening found hypercholesterolaemia
(TC8.1 mmoles/L, HDL 1.89mmoles/L) - Treated by dietary advice
- Son supervises her diet closely
- Wt reduced from 49 to 45 Kg in 3 m
11Madam Wong - Video
12The Art of First Do No Harm
Portrait of Doctor Gachet, Auvers-sue-Oise, 1890.
www.vggallery.com
13Mrs. Wai Tai
- 70 year-old widow living alone in HK
- Three daughters immigrated to Canada
- Pre-immigration health check showed a hilar mass
on CXR - Referred to the respiratory physician inoperable
bronchogenic carcinoma
14Mrs. Wai Tai
- She decided not to have chemotherapy
- She was not afraid of dying
- Her only hope was to spend more time with her
daughters - Her visa application was rejected
15The Art of Caring
The Langlois Bridge at Arles, 1888.
www.vggallery.com
16Marshy Landscape, Hague,1883. www.vggallery.com
17Vincent van Gogh,1853-1890
18 I should like to paint portraits which would
appear after a century to people living then like
apparitions. Letter W22, June1890.www.vggalle
ry.com
19Passion
- my aim in my life is to make pictures and
drawings, as many and as well as I can then, at
the end of my life, I hope to pass away, looking
back with love and tender regret, and thinking,
Oh, the pictures I might have made! -
- Letter 338, Nov 1883.
www.vggallery.com
20The Wheat Field with Cypresses, Saint-Remy 1889.
www.vggallery.com
21Practice
- I intend to make a series of them, and hope to
do better ones than the first two. It is a
method that I had already tried in Holland some
time ago... - Letter 478, April 1888. www.vggallery.com
22Self Portraits, 1886-1889. www.vggallery.com
23Imagination
- The imagination is certainly a faculty which we
must develop, one which alone can lead us to the
creation of a more exalting and consoling nature
than the single brief glance at reality - Letter B3, April 1888.
www.vggallery.com
24Starry Night, Saint-Remy 1889. www.vggallery.com
25Uniqueness
- You know that the peony is Jeannins, the
hollyhock belongs to Quost, but the sunflower is
somewhat my own. - Letter 573, Jan 1889. www.vggallery.com
26 Vase with Twelve Flowers, Arles 1888.
www.vggallery.com
27Art is Complex
- His ideas cover so much ground, examining what
is humane and how one should look at the world,
that one must free oneself from anything remotely
linked to convention to understand what he was
trying to say... - Theo van Gogh, Letter to Jo, Feb 1889.
www.vggallery.com
28Thatched Cottages at Cordeville, Auvers-sur-Oise,
1890. www.vggallery.com
29Our value to medicine lies in the
differences. Ian R. McWhinney, 1996