Pain and suffering and the artist
The tortured artist mythology is an ancient and enduring notion: that art comes mainly from suffering, and artists are likely to be emotionally fraught and even need their pain to create.
There are, of course, plenty of examples of artists using creative expression to transform pain. Frida Kahlo (1907-54) painted a series of self-portraits, including this powerful image “The Broken Column” (1944), a depiction of the years of treatment (including orthopedic appliances) she had to endure for a devastating spinal cord injury at age nineteen.
Salma Hayek commented about portraying the artist in the movie “Frida” (2002, directed by Julie Taymor), “For me, the most important thing is that she decided not to be a victim. A lot of people see the paintings and the cliches - Frida sufrida, the victim, the martyr. She was a woman who had a lot of pain in her life, but that didn’t stop her from having this wonderful love affair with life.” [More quotes on painting page 2]
In her article Creativity, the Arts, and Madness, Maureen Neihart, Psy.D. says, “A basic premise of the expressive therapies (e.g. art, music, and dance therapy, etc.) is that writing, composing, or drawing, etc., is a means to self-understanding, emotional stability and resolution of conflict. Creativity provides a way to structure or reframe pain.”
Refrigerator magnet from stickergiant.com
“Suffering is justified as soon as it becomes the raw material of beauty.”
Jean-Paul Sartre
So do we need to suffer to be creative?
Musician Sting was asked about this in the documentary All We Are Saying: “Do I have to be in pain to write? I thought so, as most of my contemporaries did; you had to be the struggling artist, the tortured, painful, poetic wreck. I tried that for a while, and to a certain extent that was successful. I was ‘The King of Pain’ after all. I only know that people who are getting into this archetype of the tortured poet end up really torturing themselves to death.
“And I’m thinking, well, I would just like to be happy,” he continues. “I’d like to do my work, and be a happy man. I’ve got enough memories of pain, of dysfunctional living, a reservoir to last me the rest of my life, so I don’t really need to manufacture that kind of life to be creative. Songwriting is every moment of your life, so if you’ve committed yourself to your art, you don’t need to go back.”
Photo of Sting from his memoir Broken Music
Actor Maggie Gyllenhaal has also addressed the stereotype. In an NPR radio interview about her film “Sherrybaby” she admits she wasn’t very open to having creative discussions with the director, on account of the closed-down personality of her character, and she added, “I’m not someone who believes ‘The more tempestuous the better; if we have a really horrible time, that will somehow lead to great work.’ I don’t think that. I would much rather have a collaborative, trusting, good relationship with the people I’m working with.”
But the suffering of anxiety and depression has historically [especially before better treatment] afflicted writers and other artists.
Psychiatrist Kay Redfield Jamison notes in her book “Touched with Fire” that the majority of people suffering from a mood disorder “do not possess extraordinary imagination, and most accomplished artists do not suffer from recurring mood swings.”
She writes, “To assume, then, that such diseases usually promote artistic talent wrongly reinforces simplistic notions of the ‘mad genius.’ But, it seems that these diseases can sometimes enhance or otherwise contribute to creativity in some people. Biographical studies of earlier generations of artists and writers also show consistently high rates of suicide, depression and manic-depression.”
[Quotes are from my article Creativity and Depression.]
Actor, producer, and writer Cynthia Brian says in her book Be the Star You Are!, “What I have learned is that pain, suffering, emptiness, and loneliness are an important part of the human experience.” But, she adds, “Sorrow and pain make us want to contract and withdraw, not expand and excel.”
Creating depends on how open we can allow ourselves to be to our inner and outer lives, and our capacity to stay emotionally balanced, not tortured.
Related Talent Development Resources pages:
abuse & creative expression
healing & art
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February 2nd, 2007 at 12:04 am
Great post! I’m in the “I’d just like to be happy and creative if I can please” camp.