Artistic creativity, style and brain disorders.

Julien Bogousslavsky
Author Information
  1. Julien Bogousslavsky: University Department of Neurology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne, Switzerland. julien.bogousslavsky@chuv.ch

Abstract

The production of novel, motivated or useful material defines creativity, which appears to be one of the higher, specific, human brain functions. While creativity can express itself in virtually any domain, art might particularly well illustrate how creativity may be modulated by the normal or pathological brain. Evidence emphasizes global brain functioning in artistic creativity and output, but critical steps which link perception processing to execution of a work, such as extraction-abstraction, as well as major developments of non-esthetic values attached to art also underline complex activation and inhibition processes mainly localized in the frontal lobe. Neurological diseases in artists provide a unique opportunity to study brain-creativity relationships, in particular through the stylistic changes which may develop after brain lesion.

MeSH Term

Brain Diseases
Creativity
Dementia
Famous Persons
Frontal Lobe
History, 20th Century
Humans
Paintings
Psychoanalytic Interpretation
Stroke

Word Cloud

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