Title: Through The Eyes of Alzheimer
1Through The Eyes of Alzheimers
- Ali R. Rahimi,MD,FACP,AGSF
- Professor of Medicine
- Mercer University School of Medicine
2Objectives
- Review the following in context to artistic
ability - Typical Aging Process
- Effects of aging in selected artists
- Monet
- Rembrandt
- Process of Alzheimers Disease (AD)
- Effects of Alzheimers Disease in selected
artists - Carolus Horn
- William Utermohlen
- Review and Conclusions
3Aging of The Brain
- Steady decline of organ function and regulatory
functions - Atrophy of the brain
- Reduced blood flow to the brain
- Decreased number of nerve cells
- Reaction time to stimuli slows
4Aging of The Brain
- Above mentioned changes have effect on
intelligence and cognition - Declines in intelligence began at about age 60
- Difficulty with recall and accumulating new
information also appear
5Aging of The Body
- Atrophy of all muscle systems
- Decreased muscle strength and endurance
- Disease processes, such as arthritis, impair
mobility and limit fine movements - Arthritis in about 50 of patients
- Decreased physical activity
6Aging of The Body
- Visual changes affect ability to see clearly and
produce detailed work - Depression
- Decreased self-confidence due to increasing
limitations and decreasing amounts of freedom
7Results of Aging
- Decreased ability to achieve same level of work
as previously possible - Thinking processes and coordination decreased
- Physical ability to draw and paint decreased
- Motivation and energy to work is decreased
8Agings Effect on Art
- Decline of output during aging
- Peak productivity in 30s and 40s
- Productivity declines after 40s
- Definite exceptions to this rule
- Grandma Moses started painting at age 78 and
completed works at age 101 - Rembrandt painting until death in 1669
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10Aging Related Impairments to Creating Art
- Visual impairments
- ex. the aging eye
- Physical impairments
- ex. rheumatoid arthritis
- Changes in energy/drive
- General aging
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12Effects Seen From an Aging Eye
- Increased glare
- Decreased color discrimination
- Decreased contrast sensitivity
- Decreased acuity
- Decreased perception of motion
- Decreased field of view
13Aging Related Disease Processes of The Eye
- Cataracts
- Presbyopia
- Macular Degeneration
- Glaucoma
- Diabetic Retinopathy
- All have effect on an artists perception
14Monets Bridge Through Cataracts
15Aging Related Impairments to Creating Art
- Visual impairments
- ex. the aging eye
- Physical impairments
- ex. rheumatoid arthritis
- Changes in energy/drive
- General aging
16Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
- Afflicted with rheumatoid arthritis in 1894
- Produced almost 400 paintings after diagnosis
- Adept skill even with arthritis
17Unbroken Spirit And Drive (1915)
18Aging Related Impairments to Creating Art
- Visual impairments
- ex. the aging eye
- Physical impairments
- ex. rheumatoid arthritis
- Changes in energy/drive
- General aging
19Aging of an Artist
- Rembrandt (1606-1669)
- Famous for detailed portraits and visual acuity
- Chronicled his aging with over 100 self-portraits
20Rembrandt 1631 to 1661
21Aging of Rembrandt (1669)
- Presbyopia caused decreased detail and clarity
- Final works linked by broader brush strokes, less
detail and yellowish hue
22The Aging Artist
- Visual aging can decrease precision and cause
color usage changes - Decreased dexterity and mobility leads to broader
strokes and less detail - Decreased energy causes decreased production
- Overall, though, aging artist still able to
produce works comparable to works they created
when they were younger
23Process of Alzheimers
- Typical aging process disease process
- Most common neurodegenerative disease of the
elderly - Subtle, progressive changes
- Loss of synaptic connections
24Alzheimers and The Brain
- General brain atrophy
- 4 classic changes
- Cortical atrophy
- Degeneration of cholinergic neurons
- Neurofibrillary tangles
- Accumulation of amyloid plaques
25Consequences of Alzheimers
- Brain related changes lead to many cognitive
impairments - Memory impairment
- Visuospatial disorientation
- Language impairment
- Constructional apraxia
26Consequences of Alzheimers (Contd)
- Alzheimers patients do not benefit from clues
or reminders - Difficulty in finding words, drawing simple
objects, and locating objects - Decreased abstract thinking
- Have little insight into own disease
27Brains Influence in Art
- Anterior left hemisphere
- Coordinates limb and eye movements
- Occipital/Temporal cortical areas
- Perceive form and depth
- Parietal areas
- Influence perception of space
- Control movement in space and time
28Effects of Brain Damage in Art
- Right hemisphere damage
- Hemi spatial neglect
- Spatial relationships of parts of image incorrect
- Left hemisphere damage
- Less impaired spatial arrangement
- Oversimplification
- Tremulous quality to work
29Alzheimers Scope of Damage
- Alzheimers generally causes global deterioration
- Will see combination of right and left sided
impairments due to global effect - Position of plaques and lesions plays a role in
changes seen - Usually do not see hemi spatial neglect or
tremulous quality
30Cornerstones of Alzheimers Art
- Fewer angles
- Impaired perception
- Impaired spatial relationships
- Increased simplification
- Overall production impaired
- Severity of these changes correlates with
severity of disease
31Contextual Criteria in Alzheimers Art
- Impaired ability to draw squares and houses
- Subject matter more abstract
- Magical subjects increasingly popular
- Ornamentation more prevalent
- Increased scribbling
- More geometric, linear shapes used
32Formal Criteria in Alzheimers Art
- Regression
- Lack of perspective
- Primitive, child-like qualities
- Distortion
- Increasing comic or grotesque quality
- Cartoon-like quality to work
- Condensation
- Overfilling/overflowing of space
33Formal Criteria in Alzheimers Art
- Transformation
- Anatomic features placed inappropriately
- Physiognomy (applying strange facial features to
humans and animals) - Stereotype
- Repetition of a subject or object
34Formal Criteria in Alzheimers Art
- Woodenness
- Enclosing pictures within frames
- Decreased depth (less shading)
- Increased rigidity (decreased movement/fluidity)
- More rigid geometric shapes
35Formal Criteria in Alzheimers Art
- Disintegration
- Neglect of spatial relationships
- Loosening of physiognomy
- Animal and human qualities become even more
abstract
36Carolus Horn (1921-1992)
- Designer for advertising company (clients
included Coca-Cola) - Completed leisure paintings in his free time
- Enjoyed drawing animals
- Enjoyed capturing the Rialto Bridge in Venice,
Italy
37Carolus Horn
- Diagnosed with Alzheimers in 1984
- Diagnosed at age 63
- Disease presented with memory impairment,
difficulty recognizing people, impaired reading
and speaking abilities
38Carolus Horn
- Progression of disease can be seen through
paintings - Painted Rialto Bridge at least five times from
1978 to 1988 - Allows visualization of the artistic changes that
Alzheimers caused in Horn
39Rialto Bridge (1978)
40Rialto Bridge (1978)
- Typical leisure painting
- Detail and shading are very precise
- Lots of movement and fluidity
41Rialto Bridge (Mid 1980s)
42Rialto Bridge (Mid 1980s)
- Painted at beginning of disease
- Ability to form smooth arches and round shapes
still present - Less movement and shading
43Rialto Bridge (1986)
44Rialto Bridge (1986)
- 2 Years after diagnosis
- Mild to moderate stage of AD
- Condensation-increased use of yellow
- Figures more cartoonish
- Ability to round shapes decreasing
45Rialto Bridge (1988)
46Rialto Bridge (1988)
- 4 years after diagnosis
- Moderate to severe stage of AD
- Unable to form smooth arch
- Predominance of yellow increased
- Less detailed clouds and cartoonish figures
471988
48Painting From 1988
- Woodenness-enclosed within a frame
- Stereotype-repetition of symbols/shapes
- Magical themed subject matter
- Increased ornamentation
49Late 1980s
50Painting From Late 1980s
- Increasing simplicity and lack of details
- Ability to square windows impaired
- Altered physiognomy-animals with human features
51Art From End Stage Ad
52Art From End Stage Ad
- Condensation-red only color used
- Total disintegration-loss of ability to form
realistic image - Unable to form squares
- Regression to child-like quality
53Last Attempts at Art
54Last Attempts at Art
- Drive to create art still present days before
death - Unable to create a realistic image
- Loss of artistic talent at this point
55William Utermohlen (1936-Present)
- Artist from Philadelphia who moved to England in
1957 - Known for detailed figurative work, portraits,
and murals - Self-motivated to produce self portraits that
showed effect of Alzheimers on his artistic
ability
56William Utermohlen
- No family history of Alzheimers
- Car accident at age 55 left him unconscious for
30 minutes - Diagnosis of Alzheimers made at age 61
- MMSE 22/30, depressed, lapses in memory, spatial
impairment in all aspects of life
57William Utermohlen
- Increasing difficulty reproducing his image as
disease progressed - Was aware of problems present in his work, but
was unable to fix them - Verbal impairment declined quickly, found that
painting helped him to express things more easily
58Utermohlen at Age 60
59Utermohlen at Age 60
- Painted before diagnosis
- Figure gripping table overpowered by room and
skylight - Meant to show fear and isolation of surroundings
60Utermohlen at Age 60
61Utermohlen at Age 60
- Typical self-portrait
- Serves as reference point for style and artistic
ability - Anatomically correct
- Appropriate perspective
62Utermohlen at Age 62
63Utermohlen at Age 62
- Earliest signs of decreasing ability to form
realistic self-image - Conveys increasing sense of anxiety
- Decreasing ability to define features
64Utermohlen at Age 63
65Utermohlen at Age 63
- Changes becoming more pronounced
- Sense of proportion altered
- No background present
66Utermohlen at Age 64
67Utermohlen at Age 64
- Facial features blurred and disjointed
- Took 2 months to complete
- Would regularly rub out work when unhappy and try
to redo - Unrealistic self-image
68Utermohlen at Age 65
69Utermohlen at Age 65
- More abstract style of self-portrait
- Primitive, child-like style of work
- Loss of realism
70 Utermohlen at Age 66
71Utermohlen at Age 66
- Attempt at more realistic style
- No close resemblance to human form
- Perspective and anatomic placement incorrect
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73The Artist with Alzheimers
- Horn and Utermohlen serve as first artists to
document the effect of Alzheimers on artistic
ability - Their paintings clearly show decline in ability
in relationship to progression of the disease - Both artists show the classic signs of impairment
of Alzheimers as previously mentioned
74Art and Alzheimers
- Producing art may also benefit Alzheimers
patients because it serves as an outlet and
expression for their feelings when other ways of
expression may be impaired - It also allows the patient control over a
creative process when the disease has taken
control away from them
75Final Conclusion
- Aging artists and those afflicted with
Alzheimers Disease prove that no matter the
obstacles life places in front of you the drive
and determination to create refuses to be
destroyed.
76References
- A portrait of Alzheimers. BBC News Online
Health. 22 Apr 2003 http//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/h
ealth/1412428.stm. - Crutch S, Isaacs K, Rossor M. Some workmen can
blame their tools artistic change in an
individual with Alzheimers disease. Lancet
20013572129-33. - Cummings J and Zarit J. Probable Alzheimers
Disease in an Artist. JAMA 1987258(19)2731-34. - Derbyshire D. Artist Charts His Slide into
Dementia. Telegraph Online. 29 June 2001. 22 Apr
2003lthttp//www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml.
77References
- Dipiro J, et al. Pharmacotherapy A
pathiophysiologic approach. New YorkMcGraw-Hill,
1999. - Espinel C. de Koonings late colours and forms
dementia, creativity, and the healing power of
art. Lancet 19963471096-98. - Galasko D, ed. Clinics in Geriatric Medicine
Alzheimers Disease and Dementia. Vol.17 No. 2.
Philadelphia W.B. Saunders Co., 2001. - Grasping Creativity. 22 Apr 2003
lthttp//arttech.about.com/library/weekly/aa02/401a
.htm.
78References
- Kane R, Ouslander J, Abrass I. Essentials of
Clinical Geriatrics. 3rd ed. New
YorkMcGraw-Hill, 1994. - Kirk A and Kerteza A. On Drawing Impairment in
Alzheimers Disease. Arch Neurol 19914873-77. - Maurer K and Frölich L. Paintings of an artist
with progressive Alzheimers Disease.
Alzheimers Insights Online. 22 Apr
2003http//www.alzheimer-insights.com/insights/vol
6no2/vol6no2a.htm. - Meulenberg F. de Koonings dementia. Lancet
19963471838.
79References
- Miller B. Alzheimers and Artistic Abilities.
Alzheimers Association of Northern California
and Northern Nevada Newsletter. Winter 2003pg 1
and 6. - Morley J. Aging through the Eye of the Artist.
Aging Successfully. Fall 1999 Vol. IX, No.
31-3, 22. - Rembrandt. Webmuseum, Paris. 22 Apr
2003lthttp//www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/rembrand
t/.gt - Scharlach A and Robinson B. Cirriculum Module on
The Aging Process. 22 Apr 2003lthttp//1st-socrates
.berkeley.edu/aging/ModuleProcess.html.gt
80References
- The Self-Portrait as Self-Study. 22 Apr 2003
http//www.research.umbc.edu/ivy/selfportrait/stu
dy.html. - Van Rijn, Rembrandt Harmensz (1606-1669). 22
Apr 2003lthttp//www.psych.ucalgary.ca/pace/va-lab/
AVDE_Website/rembrandt.html. - Visual Aging. 22 Apr 2003 http//www.psych.ucalg
ary.ca/pace/va-lab/AVDE-Website/visualaging.html. - Williams M. Complete Guide to Aging and Health.
New YorkHarmony Books, 1995.