Adolf Wölfli on World Mental Health Day

It’s World Mental Health Day, a day celebrated to raise awareness to end the stigma of mental health disorders and difficulties. On a day like today, I don’t want to spaff on about campaigns and statistics or what WMHD means to me. I’m going to use it as a means to tag this post, so people can find this blog, and find all the wonderful art in its pages, created by people who all use mental health services. I’m also a mental health service user, and an artist, but I get plenty of exposure for my art. Instead I want to talk about art and artists I like, in particular, Adolf Wölfi.

I love outsider art. It’s my favourite thing, along with folk art. Adolf Wölfli was an outsider artist associated with the Art Brut movement. He came from Bern, Switzerland. He was treated badly in his very young years, being both physically and sexually abused. He was an orphan and he got pushed from one foster home to another. Not an easy life, and it had hardly even started.


Wölfli didn’t start to draw until his admission to the Waldau Clinic, Bern, in 1895. He had been a farm labourer, and was briefly in the army, before his admission TO Waldau, however he had also been convicted of attempted child molestation and also spent some time serving a prison sentence. After his release he was picked up again for a similar offence. It was at this point he was admitted to the asylum where he would spend the rest of his adult life.

This is when he began to draw. This is when Adolf Wölfli came to life. I want to focus on his art, not his admission to Waldau, or his jail time. If you want to read more about that, check out his Wiki page, and, if you can get your hands on a copy, the book published by one of the doctors at Waldau, ‘Ein Geisteskranker als Künstler (A Psychiatric Patient as Artist)’.

Wölfli produced a massive body of work over the course of his life in residence at the asylum. Here is some of that work, and I encourage you to buy this:

Harli Tree exhibition

Mental Spaghetti returns!

Hello folks. Apologies, it has been a while! I run this site in my spare time as I work two jobs as well as pursuing my own artistic endeavours (at marielouiseplum.com, nice plug, yeah thanks!), so I get a little behind sometimes. Anyway, my first bit of news for you is regarding a speaking opportunity as an activist on a panel gathered by WEGO Health

“WEGO Health is a different kind of social network, built from the ground up for the community leaders, bloggers and tweeters who are actively involved in health online. WEGO Health is a platform for committed health advocates to foster new relationships, gain access to helpful resources, and to grow their communities. And it’s free.”

I received an email from WEGO this week, and while I am not sure if I will be taking part in the panel, felt it was appropriate to share with you all as I know a lot of bloggers, specifically mental health writers, read this blog. Check out the email below:

Mental Health Activists Speak Up!

As part of our ongoing mission to empower Health Activists, WEGO Health will be holding a series of panels for bloggers, tweeters, and other online leaders interested in Mental Health and we’d love to have you join us to share your story and your opinions!

To join us, fill out our quick survey here:  Mental Health Panel

Can’t make it? Like us on Facebook to follow along with all of the great health-related programs we offer!

If this Roundtable isn’t the best fit for you but you’re interested in attending others in the future, tell us which health conditions you discuss most often: Health Topics.

The Agony – Perry Barclay-Goddard

“THE AGONY started as twelve piece visual opus that allowed me to
record and process the journey of my recovery. Divergent from my
continued development as an artist these works have been fundamental
to my personal reconstruction. Having grown to 20+ individual pieces,
the series has not end or definitive number. As with my journey, THE
AGONY remains a work in progress.

Intended as a personal self reflection THE AGONY has already drawn
considerable attention, primarily from those navigating their own
journeys of recovery.

An unforeseen outcome of developing THE AGONY has been the discussions
initiated by my children. These pieces have providing a focal point,
from which they have been able to ask questions and develop a stronger
understand of who their father is.

This collection of original works covers a continuum of emotions from
desperation to hope, from surrender to rebirth. Each piece demands the
viewer evaluate their own internal turmoil to achieve a heightened
sense of self awareness. From the smaller intimate pieces to the
larger more powerful pieces THE AGONY records the journey of recovery
shared by many.”

- Perry Barclay-Goddard, 2012

Bold and Indie, the art of Maree.

Today’s post comes from Maree, author of Bold and Indie. Maree is an ‘emerging bipolar artist’, having been diagnosed in June 2011 with bipolar type 1. In her blog bio, Maree says “Bold & Indie started half way between Central Victoria and Florence. The artist behind Bold & Indie, Maree lives with her beautiful family, rescued horses and happy pups. She draws from her Bi Polar Disorder, Cancer survival journey and life lessons learned as a source of inspiration that comes with living with the unremitting disability. Art meditation with colour, composition and layout is used. Maree is continually inspired to paint the world, in various points of view, tones, colours, and shades from the inside out.”

I have some work from her gallery to share with you, and also an interesting blog post on living her life with bipolar type 1.

“It has been established over the many months that I have a mental illness / disability. I have learned over the years particularly during my cancer diagnosis that we cannot control the cards we are dealt, but we can certainly choose how we play the hand. I am happy to say that for now, I have read my last Bi Polar Disorder library book. I have stopped “Google-ing” and saving “pdf” scholarly medical articles on mental illness. My visits to online chat forums on mental illness have trickled to cessation. I have visited all the relevant and not so relevant websites and am armed with all the facts that I need, now its time to live life with the disorder/illness/disability and find out through experience what it all means.

When my dear partner was also diagnosed with a similar disorder a few years ago, we decided then not to be defined by a label. My husband continues to live in this essence and continues to be my role model, my guide, my confidant and my personal hero. He is my Bi Polar champion!

I have sat for seven months.

I have rocked. I have listened. I have cried. I have talked. I have yelled. I have grieved. I have photographed. I have discussed. I have read. I have browsed. I have raged. I have forgiven. I have honoured. I have respected. I have accepted. I am ready.

I have Bi Polar Type I disorder. With that disorder comes limitations owing to medications, brain psychoses, chemical imbalances with bad days and good days. I have the disorder, I am not the disorder. It has been acknowledged and embraced that I will have at times debilitating side effects but I also have a ferocious independence, confidence and ability within me to jump on an aeroplane and embark on an international adventure of a lifetime with my little girl. I know that I will be much slower in my mental capacity to think, to compute, to complete and to reason, however, with assistance and support, it does not mean I cannot complete a visual arts university degree, on the contrary, the world awaits. Sometimes it takes a breakdown of the familiar to re-evaluate what we already have and who we already are. It may take a time of feeling ‘lost or alone’ to push us to reconnect with our inner world and spirit. Experiencing that this is possible, especially in times of confusion or grief is amazing. It brings a sense of being and belonging. If offers a steadying truth that lets us live from our strengths.

Circumstances must change to accommodate new needs, but that does not mean stopping life and living permanently. Shifts happen. Life is fluid and when you allow shifts to happen in your life, when you finally let go and let see, that’s when you commence a journey of a lifetime that is equally as rewarding as it is challenging. We can be responsible for changes in attitude and behaviour. Sometimes those changes will be extraordinarily inconvenient and others may be truly enhancing and liberating. Every time you make a choice, I have learned, you are turning that part of you that chooses into something a little different from what it was before and hopefully it is always for the better, knowing that my life has depth and meaning and that we are all a part of something infinite, for a love for ourselves and others can heal our insufficiencies; for a joy in living that authentically honours it.

Finally, it would be remiss of me if I did not convey my sincerest and heartfelt thanks to you, the reader and friend for accompanying me on this journey of self-discovery and diagnosis. Thank you for being there for me when things were wild and equally depressing. Thank you for your comments on the blog, your text messages, your private mail and comments on social media sites and subscribing to my ramblings. It means that you care and I am forever thankful for that.

Thank you for accepting who I am, and have honoured the shift from who I was and used to be. I hope I have at the very least through the blog and posts, given you a deep and meaningful insight into mental illness and what it means, especially my beautiful close friends, my dearest colleagues and family, you know who you are, where this subject was foreign, confronting, scary and unchartered. I hope I have removed some of the stigma that is associated with mental illness and made to more ‘okay’ to be approached, understood and appreciated. Learning who and what we are we learn to ‘author’ our own lives. We stumble forward. We make presumptions. We change our minds and finally we learn to heal.

Perhaps someday, down the track when I have officially become a student artist in waiting, I may merge all my blogs into one on the very essence of me and who I am today, the completely sassy, bold Bi Polar, student artist in waiting, cancer survivor, mother, wife, fabulous woman! Call me Van Gogh-ette!

This is not the end, it is but a closing chapter on my diagnosis of mental illness moreover, it is an opening chapter on the rest of my life and all that waits.”

Terence Wilde end of show Private View at Highgate MH Centre.

Lovely Terence Wilde is having an end of exhibition Private View this Friday 4th May from 4-6pm at Highgate Mental Health Centre. There’s loads of paintings and drawings on display (a few from his collection are featured below) and it really is well worth going to see. I visited his last Private View and was enchanted by his drawings and paintings. If you would like to see more of his work, please check out his website.

I also wrote more about Terence here, so please check that out to see more paintings and info, plus the address for Highgate Mental Health Centre.


‘Fucking Thief’


‘I was an impossible case’


‘Hear No Evil’

Lorraine Nicholson.

“I am an artist and service user with lived experience of severe depression who has used art and photography to aid recovery.”

Lorraine has recently finished work on a book of photography and writing. The central themes of the book are ‘hope’ and ‘recovery’.

“I take the metaphor of weather to represent the unfolding journey in an attempt to make it understood by any human being, as what I essentially describe is the spectrum of emotions we all find ourselves on to varying degrees at any one point in time. How we would all love to be in control of our weather patterns.”

“Since I was a small child I have been interested in making my own unique personal reponse to the world through my artwork. It is essentially what connects me to the world around me. It is my language, my way of being in the world. At the age of 15 I was introduced by my father to photography which has become a passion. Going to art school was my almost inevitable dream but I got side-tracked into “getting the proper job”! and instead went to university in Scotland to study modern languages. It was not my language…moderate depression in my final year was the sign. But I continued on the erroneous path with jobs in tourism, recreation and working for disability charities until at the age of 40 I was stopped in my tracks by major depressive illness which has seen me hospitalised four times now. However, my creative outlets gave expression in the fullness of time to my inner Angst and allowed me to use my artwork in a recovery-focused way like a purging. What emerged was a collaboration of my poetry, artwork and photography in published book form, “The Journey Home” which traces my recovery through illness to hope to recovery. I am now at art school studying film-making and photography and hoping to use it in future with my peer support skills to work alongside others so that their voices can be heard too. My website is: www.hope4recovery.co.uk

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