Posted by : Aron вторник, 19 февруари 2013 г.

Even the most insidious disease can breed a kind of beauty. Over the course of five years, artist William Utermohlen chronicled his decline via the only medium he knew how.









"Blue Skies" - 1995



"Blue Skies" - 1995



The first self-portrait Utermohlen drew after being diagnosed with Alzheimer's.




Image by Courtesy of Galerie Beckel Odille Boïcos, Paris














"Red" - 1996



"Red" - 1996



Utermohlen seems to mourn his sense of self, a shadow of his former life.




Image by Courtesy of Galerie Beckel Odille Boïcos, Paris














"Yellow and Green" - 1998



"Yellow and Green" - 1998



Two years later, Utermohlen draws his world as shrinking. He peers out as if trapped behind prison bars.




Image by Courtesy of Galerie Beckel Odille Boïcos, Paris














"Erased Self-Portrait" - 1999



"Erased Self-Portrait" - 1999



With limited motor control it becomes difficult for Utermohlen to paint.




Image by Courtesy of Galerie Beckel Odille Boïcos, Paris







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