Psychiatric Bulletin (2002) 26: 198. doi: 10.1192/pb.26.5.198-a
© 2002 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2002) 26: 198
© 2002 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Art at Belgrave Square
Art at Belgrave Square paintings by psychiatrists and people who
have suffered mental health problems is part of Mind Odyssey.
The College is very grateful to Henry Boxer, Director of the Henry Boxer
Gallery, London, for the loan of a painting from his renowned collection of
Outsider and Visionary art. The painting Inside Banstead
Hospital by Rosemary Carson, a service user, will be exhibited in the
College from 10 May to 10 June 2002.
Rosemary Carson (b 1952)
Since the age of 6, Carson has occasionally experienced the sensation of
maggots moving in her body. She describes her childhood as rather unhappy and
attempted suicide at the age of 15. Since then she has spent periods in
psychiatric care and her treatment has included drug and electric therapies.
Her work featured in the exhibition Private Worlds Outsider and
Visionary Art at the Orleans House Gallery, Twickenham, last year. The
Wellcome Trust has recently acquired one of her paintings for its permanent
collection.
Painting has long been important to Carson but never more so after she
became ill again in 1996 when she started hearing voices. She spontaneously
began to paint faces that she subsequently receognised as fellow patients from
her earlier stays in psychiatric hospitals. This brought back memories. The
need to capture these memories was reinforced by the urgings of the
underlings (spirits of dead patients), so called because they
speak to her under the voices of others. Mostly they encourage her in her
work, but sometimes they become frightening and destructive. At these times,
she enters a local psychiatric unit until she feels able to return to painting
in safety.