The impressionists' eye diseases

monet_japanese_footbridge.jpg

An article in the NY Times discusses the work of Michael Marmor, a professor of ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine who has created a computer simulation of how eye diseases such as macular degeneration and cataracts have affected the painting styles of a number of impressionist artists.

Claude Monet, for example, was known to have suffered from slowly progressive cataracts. Although diagnosed in 1912, problems with his vision began about 7 years earlier, when Monet, who was then 65, began to complain of changes in his perception of colour:

...colors no longer had the same intensity for me...reds had begun to look muddy...my painting was getting more and more darkened. on the one hand trusting solely to the labels on the tubes of paint and, on the other, to force of habit.

As his vision continued to deteriorate, Monet's paintings became darker, less detailed and more abstract. The subject matter of the above painting from 1920 - the Japanese footbridge at Giverny, immortalized in his earlier water lily paintings - is barely recognizable.

In 1923, Monet finally agreed to have the cataract in his right eye surgically removed. The procedure had been available since the turn of the century, but he had until then refused it. Although he never had his left eye operated on, he was eventually fitted with effective corrective lenses.

Reference: 

Marmor, M. F. (2006). Ophthalmology and Art: Simulation of Monet's Cataracts and Degas' Retinal Disease. Arch. Ophthalmol. 124:1764-1769. [Full text]

More like this

As I note in my book, the most famous impressionists all suffered from serious medical problems: Monet became blind (but didn't stop painting the bridges of Giverny). Vincent Van Gogh, drinker of kerosene, turpentine, and absinthe, probably thought the coronas he painted around stars and…
It's long been noted that the impressionists steadily grew more abstract as the 19th century came to a close. One only has to compare an early Monet from the 1870's to a late Monet landscape to understand the importance of this transition. The pretty pastels and dappling light gave way to thick…
Many famous artists and musicians have had the perception of their own art altered by abnormal physical or mental changes. Critics and historians have often credited these changes as major sources of creativity. Insanity and Drugs seem to usually be the most cited and obvious candidates but very…
It's been a while since we discussed the Avastin-Lucentis controversy, but the battle has been taken up by another blogger, Howard Brody at Hooked: Quick overview--Genentech, the biotech firm, is maker of a very successful drug (brand name: Avastin) that is quite useful in colon cancer. The drug…
...my painting was getting more and more darkened. on the one hand trusting solely to the labels on the tubes of paint and, on the other, to force of habit.

As his vision continued to deteriorate, Monet's paintings became darker,

This aspect doesn't make sense to me. If things looked darkened to him, I would think that he would do one of two things ...

* Go by the labels on the tubes of paint, in which case things would remain more or less unchanged in terms of brightness to other observers;

* Use brighter colours to compensate, so that the appearance to him was more or less the same.

Or am I missing something?

By Scott Belyea (not verified) on 04 Dec 2007 #permalink

I have a stable form of retinitis pigmentosa and possibly the beginnings of macular degeneration. I also perceive color differently than I did when I was younger. It isn't so much that colors have become darker to me, as a loss of ability to detect hues, so the colors I use in my paintings have lost some subtlety. As my vision decreases, I am losing the ability to see and draw the fine details I once did. I think that was what Monet experienced and why his style of painting changed.

By carolyn13 (not verified) on 05 Dec 2007 #permalink

I have heard people make jokes about the impressionists must have had eye problems but I never knew it was true! I think this speaks to the idea that rather that beauty being in the eye of the beholder, it is in the brain of the beholder. I am science, my sister is the professional artist, but I can enjoy esthetics, and I believe the purveyors of beauty, the artists, can touch one's heart and even soul. whether the picture is crystal clear or a blur that the brain interprets as beauty.
Dave Briggs :~)

I am an artist and have a good chance of getting macular degeneration. It runs in my family. This is my first visit to your blog. Very interesting stuff.

Hey, I got a clean bill of health on my eyes today, and I don't have macular degeneration. That's great news and the RP has stayed stable, just nibbling at the edges. I may be painting for more years yet.

By carolyn13 (not verified) on 06 Dec 2007 #permalink