Neurological Disorders in Famous Artists - Part 4. Группа авторов

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chosen for propaganda travels in the USA, even though his medical doctors were reluctant to allow him to travel regarding his clinical condition. Between 1918 and 1921, he spent several months in the USA, lecturing on French art and describing his work during exhibitions organized in New York and Chicago by the French art dealer René Gimpel (1881–1945). Lemordant was made a Doctor by Yale University. Embodying mutilated France, he became an icon of Franco-American friendship.

      The end of Lemordant’s medical history was unexpected. In 1934, after another surgical procedure, he was involved in a car crash and suddenly recovered some measure of visual capacities [Guyon, 1935]. This final twist gave weight to some claims that Lemordant had never been blind, but merely took advantage of his supposed disability.

      Maurice Prost: The Resilient Body

      The amputation of a limb, especially an upper limb or a hand, is a cruel condition for an artist. This has led some artists to try to use a prothesis with a utilitarian or esthetic purpose. Nevertheless, they frequently discarded their protheses because they induced an exacerbation of stump pain. Phantom limb phenomena and stump neuromas were also obstacles to the use of a prothesis [Tatu et al., 2014]. The sculptor Maurice Prost, whose left upper limb was amputated after a war injury, is a good example of this.

      At the outbreak of the war, Prost was a student in jewelry. He began the war in the 147th infantry regiment and received a bullet in the left arm in October 1914 in the Argonne offensives. His injured limb was amputated at the lower third of the arm in a military hospital. The surgeon predicted that he would never be able to practice sculpture again [Maingon, 2014]. Stump pain due to a neuroma prevented Prost from using a prothesis. He was declared an invalid with the following diagnosis: amputation of left upper limb, stump neuroma, impossibility to use a prothesis and cardiac disturbances (Carte d’invalidité de Maurice Prost; Musée Robert Dubois-Corneau, Brunoy, France).

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      Thus, the mutilation led Maurice Prost to find new efficient ways to create again. Nevertheless, the war is entirely absent from his work. He focused on animal sculpture. Prost showed signs of what is today called resiliency, a concept conceived nearly a century later by the neuropsychiatrist Boris Cyrulnik [2003] to define the capacity to overcome a traumatism. Gustave Pimienta (1888–1982), a sculptor who lost several fingers during the First World War, expressed the same resiliency in the 1960s: “It is possible that my disabilities and my limited energy support my work. The pain and tiredness following each of my efforts force me to focus on one essential task. My art is undoubtedly strengthened by my mutilation” [Florisoone, 1986, p. 31].

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      Georges Braque: The Trepanned Painter

      After studies to become a painter-decorator in Paris, George Braque decided to devote himself to painting. Close to the artists of the Parisian avant-garde and to Guillaume Apollinaire, he was first interested in fauvism and befriended Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) during the peak period of cubism.

      Becoming an officer in the 224th infantry regiment, Braque was involved in the Artois offensive in the spring of 1915. As a commander, he had little time to draw, unlike other mobilized painters who brought back hundreds of drawings from the trenches. On May 11th, 1915, during the Neuville-Saint-Vaast offensives in the North of France, Braque’s head was hit by shrapnel. His metal helmet, only recently delivered to the French army, saved his life. Nevertheless, Braque was left for dead on the battlefield. He was eventually evacuated to the rear of the frontline by stretcher-bearers, suffering from a severe head injury.

      Braque’s medical report detailed that he was first treated in a field ambulance and was later hospitalized, on May 30th, 1915, in the militarized Hôtel Meurice in Paris. Upon admission, he was diagnosed with the following: “Skull fracture in left fronto-parietal region. Trepanation” (Dossier Georges Braque; Service des Archives Médicales et Hospitalières des Armées, SAMHA, Limoges, France). Regarding the severity of his wound, it is likely that Braque was trepanned by the surgeon of the field ambulance to evacuate an extradural or an epidural hematoma. In July 1915, he was transferred to a military hospital in Bois-Colombes and was eventually discharged in 1917. Like most First World War wounded soldiers, Braque began a long procedure to obtain an invalidity pension. The archives related to this procedure detail his injury: a 4- by 1-cm groove in the left frontoparietal part of the skull, creating a pulsating scare (Archives Départementales de Seine-Maritime, fiche matricule de Georges Braque, 1R 3113, Rouen, France).

      Braque progressively returned to civilian life. On January 14th, 1917, the Russian painter Marie Vassilieff (1884–1957) organized a banquet to celebrate his return. Cendrars, Picasso, and Henri Matisse (1869–1954) were invited to this dinner which was immortalized in a famous painting. The return to artistic practice was difficult for Braque: “I have suffered not only from the injury but also from being unable to paint for months. The mind was more affected than the body” [Danchev, 2013, p. 131]. These depressive symptoms were mainly related to his posttraumatic syndrome but also to the loss of brain substance due to the injury. Nevertheless, Braque resumed his artistic activities during his hospitalization to paint La Joueuse de Mandoline (Lille Métropole Museum of Modern, Contemporary and Outsider Art, LaM, Villeneuved’Ascq, France). This painting is an ambitious cubist portrait which does not show any artistic break with his prewar works. It announces one of his main paintings of that period, La Musicienne (Kunstmuseum, Basel, Switzerland), begun in 1917.

      After his injury, Braque, like many painters, remained silent about the war, which is never featured in his work. He focused on art, grew closer to the painter Juan Gris (1887–1927), and started to write his reflections on painting [Braque, 1917].

      Fernand Léger: Cubism at War

      Fernand Léger first wanted to become an architect but soon turned to drawing. A part of the Parisian artistic avant-garde, he progressively began experimenting with cubism. In 1914 he was mobilized in an engineer regiment. In contrast to Georges Braque, Léger drew, wrote and painted a lot during the war and his work was deeply influenced by the conflict.

      He was involved