Ron Hampshire and the Adamson Collection: Myth, Metaphor, or Metamorphosis?
Adapted from 鈥楶icturing Mental Health鈥, originally published by wellcomecollection.org.
David O’Flynn and Chloe Trainor
Very little is known about Ron Hampshire, other than that he was a patient at Netherne psychiatric hospital in the 1950s and 1960s, where he attended the art studio set up by Edward Adamson. Ron left behind a series of drawings and paintings, which are now part of the Adamson Collection of artworks by Netherne patients. In 1978, the Adamson Collection Trust (ACT) was founded to preserve and promote the rich history of this work. The paintings and drawings that are now held at Wellcome as the Adamson Collection/Wellcome Library and continue to generate valuable dialogue between artists, patients, practitioners and researchers, who bring new insight to the collection from the vantage of their own experiences and expertise.
Hampshire鈥檚 work came into existence because of an 鈥榚xperiment鈥 initiated during the 1940s by Dr. Eric Cunningham Dax, Medical Superintendent and Research Director at Netherne. Dax wanted to establish if art produced by patients could be a useful diagnostic tool for psychiatrists, and whether the process of creating art had any therapeutic value for patients. He recruited Edward Adamson, a trained artist, to help him in his research.
When Adamson arrived at Netherne in 1946, the prevailing view among psychiatrists was that the aetiology of mental illness was biological, and, thus, was best managed through physical treatments such as insulin coma therapy, electroconvulsive therapy, lobotomy and leucotomy. The introduction of an art programme to the hospital was, therefore, a significant departure from these established forms of treatment.聽 Adamson held regular sessions in a newly established art studio, and would then pass patient artwork to the psychiatrists to aid their diagnosis. However, he was more than a 鈥榩assive facilitator鈥: he would strike up conversations and lead patients into the creative process by initially drawing the things they talked about.
It was Adamson鈥檚 belief that the act of making and expressing held the power to heal. After Dax left in 1951, he used the opportunity to turn the studio into a less clinical space in which the therapeutic dimensions of the creative process were prioritised over diagnosis. The vast majority of the artwork in the Adamson Collection is from this later period (1951鈥1980s).
Adamson鈥檚 view
Adamson believed in the healing capacity of art, and understood that a patient鈥檚 work could sit simultaneously in the worlds of art and medicine. His notebooks, written between the 1950s and the 1980s, are filled with unpublished commentary on patient artworks. As well as recording the patients鈥 insights into their own works, Adamson made his own interpretations.
For Adamson, it was possible to read the improvement in Ron鈥檚 mental health in his artistic development. However, Matthew Williams, Artist in Residence at Bethlem Gallery & artist with lived experience of using arts for health (twitter @FrogMw) has a different view: 鈥淚 can understand why Adamson and hospital staff might have looked at this work and seen it as representing progress; a transition from darkness and silence to light.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 tempting to read diagnostic clues in works of art,鈥 he continues. 鈥淢ost people would think that dark colours are sad and troubling, and light colours are bright and happy, but I actually find bright colours unsettling.鈥
Matthew thinks that Ron鈥檚 earlier paintings (鈥楾he Lake鈥, 鈥楥hristmas Decorations鈥 and 鈥楾he Shipwreck鈥) have 鈥渞eal honesty, real emotion and depth鈥. But for him 鈥渢he later paintings seem hollow and meaningless. There鈥檚 something false about them.鈥 Was Ron giving Adamson and the doctors what he thought they needed to see? Matthew thinks so: 鈥淔or me, this is a perfect example of the hospital experience. You come in, you paint, you learn what you have to do to get discharged and you paint bright, happy pictures of houses and apple trees to get out the door.鈥
Adamson, however, was well aware of the risk of influencing students/patients in the studio: 鈥淚t is not unknown for an astute patient to 鈥榗atch on鈥, as it were, to what he feels the instructor is looking for and to supply it for an indefinite period,鈥 he observed.聽 For Adamson, the diagnostic and therapeutic value of the artworks was a matter of careful interpretation alongside the personal interactions and the process of creation.
An art therapists鈥 views
Art therapy鈥檚 complex identity is rooted in art, art education, psychoanalysis and psychiatry. Along with other artists such as Adrian Hill, Adamson was instrumental in the founding of art therapy as a profession in Britain.
When Adamson began practicing at Netherne, many of the people he worked with had schizophrenia and other forms of psychosis. However, art therapy has changed considerably since then, according to Val Huet (Chief Executive Officer of BAAT), and today鈥檚 art therapist works with a variety of children and adults who have experienced emotional distress and may be too traumatised to communicate with words alone.
So, what do contemporary art therapists make of Ron Hampshire鈥檚 paintings? A group of practising art therapists came to Wellcome Collection to view and discuss works from the Adamson Collection.
Some agreed with Adamson鈥檚 assessment that the works were evidence of a progression in Ron鈥檚 condition. Donna Goodman thought that 鈥淩on鈥檚 artwork can be experienced as his journey through psychosis and hospitalisation鈥 with the turning point 鈥渟ymbolically represented in 鈥楾he Storm鈥欌.
Jill Davies accepted that, 鈥淲e can never know exactly how Hampshire felt or whether the true nature of his recovery was reflected in the bright, idealised scenes of his later work.鈥 Although she did observe 鈥渢he growth from basic mark-making to the 鈥榝looding鈥 of emotion, which seems to embody the opening of an emotional dam and corresponds to him regaining his voice鈥.
Helping people through art is itself as much an art as a science. As art psychotherapist, Katherine Heritage says, 鈥淗olding uncomfortable, vulnerable or incomplete expressions is integral to the work of an art therapist.鈥 We may not know much about Ron Hampshire, but we know that his mental health did improve at Netherne, and in his works, he has left traces of himself as vivid as any photograph.
The researchers鈥 views
The varying interpretations of 鈥楳etamorphosis鈥 invite many more questions than they resolve, not only in terms of the nature of Adamson鈥檚 practice, but about how, and through whom, we understand the experiences of patients. For Dr David O鈥橣lynn, Chair of the Adamson Collection Trust, and historian, Chloe Trainor, it is questions such as these which have inspired further research into Hampshire鈥檚 work.
David and Chloe were introduced to one another by Solomon Szekir-Papasavva, Wellcome Collection鈥檚 Arts and Health Engagement Officer, when all three collaborated to write 鈥楢rt, power, and the asylum: Adamson, healing and the Collection鈥 in response to a series of events held at Wellcome.聽 鈥楳etamorphosis鈥 was a series both were familiar with, particularly David, as it had been displayed for a number of years in a corridor of Lambeth hospital where he worked. However, their knowledge was limited to the account given by Adamson in Art as Healing, and the collaboration with Wellcome facilitated a more in-depth, critical engagement with this fascinating sequence. Earlier this year, Chloe noted certain inconsistencies, and asked David: 鈥淲hy does Adamson state that 鈥楳etamorphosis鈥 was created over six years when all 37 of Hampshire鈥檚 work are dated between 1960-1961, according to the Wellcome catalogue?鈥
In October 2018, David, Chloe and Solomon conducted a survey of all of Hampshire鈥檚 known work and were astonished by what they found, knowing only the story told in Art as Healing.

The earliest example of Hampshire鈥檚 work is dated 29th聽 September 1960, and is clearly the work of a trained artist. It includes a number of smaller compositions, suggesting he may have been planning a series of his own.


This is the first image included in 鈥楳etamorphosis鈥, described in Art as Healing as 鈥榯his man鈥檚 first attempt to make images鈥, even though it was not created until 31st January 1961.

Amongst the 37 paintings and drawings, there are four studies of 鈥楾he Lake鈥, which is the fourth image selected for the 鈥楳etamorphosis’ sequence.聽 This initial study is dated 21 April 1961, several months before the final painting of 鈥楾he Lake鈥 in August 1961.
Unfortunately, the last image included in the series was lost during the years at Lambeth Hospital. However, the latest surviving painting, known as 鈥楾he Tree鈥, is also dated August 1961.
So, what initial conclusions can be drawn from this more in-depth study of Hampshire鈥檚 work?
Firstly, contrary to the six years recorded by Adamson, archival research confirms that the sequence was created over a much shorter period between January-August 1961. Hampshire鈥檚 sketches indicate that he was working on a series, and that his approach was far more considered than Adamson鈥檚 analysis conveyed.聽 Rather than the 鈥榤ute casual labourer鈥 who first put pen to paper in Adamson鈥檚 studio, it is evident that Hampshire was technically trained in painting and drawing.聽 Furthermore, whilst it remains impossible to confirm whether or not Hampshire could speak, he writes a lot on a number of his paintings and drawings, and thus may have used the written word as an alternative means through which to communicate with those around him, including his doctors.
David says he was always puzzled by the first two paintings in the series: 鈥淗ow could a man stare at a blank sheet of paper for six months then do those two drawings, particularly the second mechanical drawing of trains?鈥 These images, viewed in conjunction with the entirety of Hampshire鈥檚 surviving works, now make much more sense.
Perhaps most significantly, this case study serves as a reminder of how our understanding of patient experience is often mediated through healthcare professionals. It confirms that Adamson constructed a sequence, omitting a number of significant examples of Hampshire鈥檚 work in favour of those he perhaps felt better represented the narrative of his recovery. This is not unlike the example of psychiatrist, Walter MacClay, who assembled a series of undated Louis Wain paintings to demonstrate his theories of psychotic disintegration, which David explored in an earlier film project, 鈥楾wo Men & Eight Cats鈥.
Although this research is still in its infancy, it appears the 鈥楳etamorphosis鈥 narrative may have emerged as early as 1964, at a time when Adamson was working with collaborators to establish the 糖心视频. Was Adamson influenced by Dax and his experiments to see if art can be used as a diagnostic tool? How does this impact the story of art as healing? Does what he did with Hampshire鈥檚 work matter? There is the joy of the collection being held at Wellcome, so that fundamental research into this unexplored collection remains possible.
Written by聽David O’Flynn听补苍诲听Chloe Trainor.
Photo credit:
Lalita Kaplish and Solomon Szekir-Papasavva, 鈥楶icturing Mental Health鈥, <>
Edward Adamson and John Timlin, Art As Healing, (London: Coventure Ltd., 1984), <>
David O鈥橣lynn, Solomon Szekir-Papasavva and Chloe Trainor, 鈥楢rt, Power and the asylum: Adamson, healing and the Collection鈥, The Lancet Psychiatry, Vol.5, Issue.5, pp.396-399聽<>
David O鈥橣lynn, 鈥楾wo Men and Eight Cats鈥, <>
This article was first published听颈苍听Newsbriefing (Winter 2018), a publication for members.
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