Volume 221 - Issue 6 - December 2022
Felix Nussbaum (1904–1944). Death Triumphant (The Skeletons Playing for the Dance) 1944. Oil on canvas.
Felix-Nussbaum-Haus at Museumsquartier Osnabruck. Loan from the Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung. Photo: Museumquartier Osnabruck, photographer Christian Grovermann.
Felix Nussbaum was a German, Jewish painter, who suffered from depression. He was born in Osnabruck and studied art in Hamburg and Berlin. He was influenced by many artists, but in particular, by Van Gogh and Henri Rousseau. After the Nazis gained power in Germany in 1933, Nussbaum and his wife spent several years in exile, mainly in Belgium. When the Nazis attacked Belgium in 1940, he was arrested as a ‘hostile alien’ and taken to Saint-Cyprien camp in France, a grim and desperate place which he portrayed in his paintings. Nussbaum signed a request to be returned to Germany, and during his journey home, he managed to escape. He and his wife went into hiding, but were discovered in an attic by the Nazis, arrested and sent to Auschwitz, where they were murdered in 1944. He was 39.
This picture is the last one Nussbaum is known to have painted. During his time in the camp at Saint-Cyprien, Nussbaum was depressed and was convinced that all the inmates would be killed. He became preoccupied with the subject of death. He seems to have put a considerable amount of planning into this picture. He made numerous individual studies of the figures in the painting. Kaster (1997) observes that the painting represents: ‘the hellish noise of death triumphant after the successful destruction of western culture, the universal work of devastation. The coffin makers have completed their task and they are celebrating their success in a dissonant cacophony’. Nussbaum gave his own features to the figure of the organ grinder.
Kaster, Karl George (ed.) Felix Nussbaum. Art Defamed. Art in Exile. Art in Resistance. (trans. Eileen Martin). New York: The Overlook Press, 1997.
We are always looking for interesting and visually appealing images for the cover of the Journal andwould welcome suggestions or pictures,which should be sent to Dr Allan Beveridge, British Journal of Psychiatry, 21 Prescot Street, London, E1 8BB, UK or [email protected].
Highlights of this issue
Highlights of this issue
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- 21 November 2022, p. A47
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Editorial
Time to re-evaluate the risks and benefits of valproate and a call for action
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- 07 July 2022, pp. 711-713
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Review
Cognitive trajectories following onset of psychosis: a meta-analysis
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- 23 September 2022, pp. 714-721
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Paper
Latent subtypes of manic and/or irritable episode symptoms in two population-based cohorts
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- 04 January 2022, pp. 722-731
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Consistent brain structural abnormalities and multisite individualised classification of schizophrenia using deep neural networks
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- 11 February 2022, pp. 732-739
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Real-world clinical and cost-effectiveness of community clozapine initiation: mirror cohort study
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- 19 April 2022, pp. 740-747
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Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on psychotropic medication uptake: time-series analysis of a population-wide cohort
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- 15 August 2022, pp. 748-757
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Associations between antipsychotic use, substance use and relapse risk in patients with schizophrenia: real-world evidence from two national cohorts
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- 25 August 2022, pp. 758-765
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Correspondence
Provision of electroconvulsive therapy in Italy
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- 21 November 2022, p. 766
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Reply
Author's reply
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- 21 November 2022, p. 766
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Correspondence
Is there enough evidence for ECT?
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- 21 November 2022, pp. 766-767
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RE: ‘Shock tactics’, ethics and fear: an academic and personal perspective on the case against electroconvulsive therapy
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- 21 November 2022, p. 767
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Book Review
Mental Health, Diabetes and Endocrinology Edited by Anne M. Doherty, Aoife M. Egan and Sean Dinneen Cambridge University Press. 2021. £34.99 (pb). 166 pp. ISBN:9781911623618
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- 21 November 2022, p. 768
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Holding a Mirror up to Nature: Shame, Guilt, and Violence in Shakespeare By James Gilligan and David A.J. Richards Cambridge University Press. 2021. £22.99 (pb). 250 pp. ISBN 9781108970396
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- 21 November 2022, pp. 768-769
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Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope
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- 21 November 2022, pp. 771-772
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Extra
The persecuted – psychiatry in pictures
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- 21 November 2022, p. 713
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Georg Groddeck: the first psychoanalytical novel, the Soul-Seeker, and a musical mystery in Essex – psychiatry in literature
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- 21 November 2022, p. 731
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Sensibility and schizophrenia: Wilhelm Waiblinger on Friedrich Hölderlin's life, poetry and madness – psychiatry in literature
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- 21 November 2022, p. 739
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John Conolly – a legacy and a future obligation – reflection
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- 21 November 2022, p. 765
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Front Cover (OFC, IFC) and matter
BJP volume 221 issue 6 Cover and Front matter
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- 21 November 2022, pp. f1-f3
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