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Early American painter Gilbert Stuart has long been mistakenly
represented as a hard-drinking rogue, habitual liar, and
inexplicable financial failure. To explain his stylistic unevenness
as an artist, he is assumed to have had an inferior assistant, but
the documentary evidence for an assistant who painted on his
portraits is non-existent-in fact, there is evidence to the
contrary. This ground-breaking study demonstrates that Stuart
suffered from a hereditary form of manic depression, leading him to
create pictures that contain peculiar lapses characteristic of a
manic-depressive, or bipolar, artist. Using documentary and
empirical evidence-from diaries and letters to x-radiographs of
paintings-this book fills important gaps in our knowledge of
Stuart, and connects the strange visual effects in some of Stuart's
paintings with cognitive deficits attendant with the disorder. In
addition to Stuart, other bipolar artists, including George Romney,
Raphaelle Peale, Gilbert Stuart Newton, and William Rimmer, are
discussed in relation to these deficits, revealing patterns which
carry broader implications for all manic-depressive artists. This
volume is a significant contribution not only to studies of Stuart
and the four other painters but also to our understanding of the
mind of a manic-depressive artist. It bridges the broad disciplines
of art history and psychopathology.
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