Review waiting, please be patient.
This may take 3 months or more, since drafts are reviewed in no specific order. There are 5,186 pending submissions waiting for review.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
Reviewer tools
|
Submission declined on 30 June 2026 by DoubleGrazing (talk).
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
This draft has been resubmitted and is currently awaiting re-review. |
Comment: "External links" -- that is, links to pages that are neither in any (English, German, other) Wikipedia nor in any other Wikimedia project -- don't belong in the body text of a Wikipedia article. Please remove these.Links to German or other non-English Wikipedias should use Template:Ill. I've converted a couple of yours, to show you how to do this. (The examples are simple; for more complex examples, please examine Center for Persecuted Arts, Mathieu de Tournay, and Famous Escapes -- but preferably read and digest Template:Ill/doc.) -- Hoary (talk)WWU 👍︎ 01:21, 1 July 2026 (UTC)
Comment: This is unreferenced, at least in the sense that we would normally expect to see, namely with inline citations and dynamic footnotes (see WP:REFB). It may be that the items listed in the 'Literature' section (which is non-standard, per Manual of Style/Layout) are meant as sources, although they could also be a list of publications by the subject, 'Further reading', etc.; in any case, since they are not cited anywhere it is difficult to tell which of them has provided what information, if any, in this draft. DoubleGrazing (talk) 13:40, 30 June 2026 (UTC)

The Morgenthaler Collection is a collection of artistic works by patients and everyday objects from psychiatric wards, assembled from 1913 onwards by the Bernese psychiatrist Walter_Morgenthaler (1882-1965), which is housed at the Museum of Psychiatry in Bern (Switzerland). Along with the Prinzhorn Collection in Heidelberg and the Collection de l’Art Brut in Lausanne, it ranks among the most important collections of works of so-called ‘outsider art’ or ‘art brut’ from before 1945, which were created whilst still uninfluenced by the expectations of the art market.[1]
The origins of the collection
editFrom 1913 onwards, whilst working as a doctor at the University Psychiatric Hospital in Bern, Morgenthaler collected objects relating to the history of psychiatry, as well as artistic works by patients, for the Swiss National Exhibition in Bern in 1914. The historical objects mainly related to coercive measures (straightjackets, restraints, head baths, restraint chairs) and were intended to represent the older, now-obsolete form of psychiatry. After the exhibition, the collection was transferred to the Waldau, where Morgenthaler used it to set up a small museum comprising two rooms.


Morgenthaler continually expanded this collection, particularly with works by patients. To this end, he combed through all of the approximately 8,000 medical records available at the clinic at that time and selected works from them. He also encouraged his own patients to draw.[2] The collection formed the basis for his habilitation thesis,Transitions between Drawing and Writing in the Mentally Ill , published in 1918.[3] Morgenthaler paid particular attention to Adolf Wölfli, several of whose works he included in his collection. Wölfli also painted two display cases and two cupboards in the museum. With his 1921 book Adolf Wölfli: A Mentally Ill Person as an Artist[4] Morgenthaler brought Wölfli and the art of psychiatric patients to the attention of a wider public and provided a decisive impetus for the avant-garde art movement of the interwar period.[5] In 1920, Morgenthaler left the Waldau, but continued to oversee the collection until the late 1920s and later expanded it with the addition of a few individual works.
Historical collection up to 1950
edit

The core collection of the art collection, assembled by Morgenthaler – and, in a few instances, by fellow doctors – comprises around 5,000 works by some 300 patients. These include drawings, watercolours, collages, textile works and sculptural objects, mostly dating from the period 1880–1930. With a few exceptions, they originate from the Waldau. The artists include Constance Schwarztlin-Berberat (1845–1911), Heinrich Anton Müller (1869–1930), Hans Fahrni (1874–1939) and Rosa Marbach (1881–1926)[6], as well as lesser-known figures such as Oskar Bütikofer (1860–1925), Lina Cécile Colliot (1867–1937), Louise Deci (1846–1919), Marie von Fischer-von Sinner (1868–1956), Marie Füri (1893–1929), Friedrich Kohler (1875–1960), Emma Marti (1870–1949) and Karl Schneeberger (1880–1948). The collection also includes works by patients with a classical artistic education who adhered to a more traditional style of painting, such as Friedrich Walthard (1818–1870) and Fritz Jenzer (1907–1985).[7]
In addition to the patients’ works, the collection’s original holdings consist of objects relating to coercive measures collected by Morgenthaler, as well as a number of other items relating to life in the institution and non-artistic works by patients.
New collection after 1950
editFrom 1963 onwards, Heinz Feldmann, a member of staff in the technical department at Waldau, took charge of the collection and began to expand it with around 5,000 objects from everyday clinical life and the running of the hospital: research instruments, equipment from the farm, beds, electrical installations, etc. With the reopening of the old museum as the Bern Psychiatric Museum in 1993, the collection of artistic works also resumed, focusing on former patients of the clinic, many of whom worked – and continue to work – in the Kunstwerkstatt_Waldau. These include, amongst others, Daniel Curty (1960–2013), Ursula Demmler (born 1962), Gabor Dios (1953–2020), Annemarie Flückiger (born 1945), Martin Flückiger (born 1970), Marco Güdel (b. 1983), Gordian Hannemann (b. 1958), Hermann Kammer (1922–1987), Winfried Keusch (1934–2006), Heinz Lauener (born 1977), Bruno Layer (born 1952), Louisa Johanna Morgentau (born 1962), Margrit Roth (1955–2013), Philippe Saxer (1965–2013) and Jonas Scheidegger (born 1981).
Impact
editIn 1945, Jean Dubuffet visited Morgenthaler and the collection at the Waldau, acquired a number of works by Morgenthaler, and drew attention to Wölfli and other artists under the term ‘art brut’ through publications and exhibitions. In 1963, Harald Szeemann presented works from the Morgenthaler Collection, the Prinzhorn Collection and Dubuffet’s collection at the Berner Kunsthalle in the exhibition ‘Insania pingens’. At Documenta 5 in Kassel in 1972, Szeemann reconstructed Wölfli’s cell and a room from the small Waldau Museum containing artworks from the Morgenthaler Collection in the section entitled ‘Art by the Mentally Ill’ ('Bildnerei der Geisteskranken').[8] This marked the definitive recognition of Wölfli and ‘outsider art’ as an integral part of the international art world. The particular focus on Wölfli led to his works from the Morgenthaler Collection being transferred to the Adolf Wölfli Foundation, established in 1975. The rest of the collection received little attention for a long time. It was not until the reopening of the old museum in a new form under the name Psychiatrie-Museum Bern (Museum of Psychiatry Berne), that the objects and works of art were once again brought to the attention of a wider public through exhibitions and loans from 1993 onwards.
Exhibition catalogues with artworks
edit- Werner Jutzeler, Marie Louise Käsermann: Von Bildwelten in der Psychiatrie. Katalog zur Ausstellung im Psychiatrie-Museum Bern. Bern: EditionSolo, 2003. ISBN 978-3-95227-590-5.
- Werner Jutzeler, Marie Louise Käsermann: Von Tieren umgeben sind Menschen. Katalog zur Ausstellung in der Klinik für Psychiatrie Altenburg und im Psychiatrie-Museum Bern. Bern: EditionSolo, 2004, ISBN 978-3-9522759-3-1.
- Werner Jutzeler, Marie Louise Käsermann: Von Bildern als Spiegel der Seele. Katalog zur Ausstellung im Psychiatrie-Museum Bern und in der Klinik für Psychiatrie Altenburg. Bern: EditionSolo, 2006. ISBN 978-3-9522759-6-2.
- Werner Jutzeler, Marie-Louise Käsermann, Andreas Altorfer: Der Himmel ist blau & Nackt sein. Werke aus der Sammlung Morgenthaler, Waldau. Bern: edition solo, 2008. ISBN 978-3-9522759-9-3.
Further reading
edit- Michel Beretti, Armin Heusser (eds): Der letzte Kontinent. Bericht einer Reise zwischen Kunst und Wahn. Ein Bilder- und Lesebuch mit Materialien aus dem Waldau-Archiv. Zürich: Limmat-Verlag, 1997. ISBN 978-3-85791-281-8.
- Katrin Luchsinger (eds): Pläne. Werke aus psychiatrischen Kliniken in der Schweiz 1850–1920, Zürich 2008. ISBN 978-3-0340-0892-1.
- Katrin Luchsinger: Die Vergessenskurve. Werke aus psychiatrischen Kliniken in der Schweiz um 1900. Eine kulturanalytische Studie, Zürich: Chronos, 2016. ISBN 978-3-0340-1305-5.
- Helen Hirsch, Katrin Luchsinger, Thomas Röske (eds): Extraordinaire! Unbekannte Werke aus psychiatrischen Einrichtungen in der Schweiz um 1900. Zürich: Scheidegger & Spiess, 2018. ISBN 978-3-85881-604-7.
- Markus Landert, Kunstmuseum Thurgau (eds): Jenseits aller Regeln – Aussenseiterkunst, ein Phänomen. Zürich: Scheidegger & Spiess, 2021. ISBN 978-3-03942-014-8.
External links
edit- Kulturgüter-Inventar (primarily textile work from the collection)
- Psychiatrie-Museum Bern (on the collection)
- Blog on the Morgenthaler Collection (Swiss National Museum)
- Adolf Wölfli Foundation
[[:Category:Museums in Bern]] [[:Category:Collections]]
- ↑ Rolf Röthlisberger: Die ‘Sammlung Morgenthaler’: einst – heute! – morgen? In: Schweizerische Ärztezeitung, 2001 (82): 1358-61.
- ↑ Meinrad Lienert, Andreas Nydegger: Walter Morgenthaler und das bildnerische Schaffen der Geisteskranken, Medical dissertation, Bern 1994.
- ↑ Walter Morgenthaler: Übergänge zwischen Zeichnen und Schreiben bei Geisteskranken. In: Schweizer Archiv für Neurologie und Psychiatrie 3 (1918), 255-305.
- ↑ Walter Morgenthaler: Adolf Wölfli. Ein Geisteskranker als Künstler. Bern: Bircher, 1921
- ↑ John M. MacGregor: The Discovery of the Art of the Insane, Princeton 1989.
- ↑ Meinrad Lienert, Rolf Röthlisberger: Die Löwenbraut der Waldau. Aquarelle von Rosa Marbach, Bern: Benteli, 1996. ISBN 978-3-7165-1011-7.
- ↑ Michel Beretti, Armin Heusser (eds): Der letzte Kontinent. Bericht einer Reise zwischen Kunst und Wahn. Ein Bilder- und Lesebuch mit Materialien aus dem Waldau-Archiv. Zürich: Limmat-Verlag, 1997. ISBN 978-3-85791-281-8.
- ↑ Thomas Röske: 1972: Von der Art brut zu den Individuellen Mythologien, in: Kunst und Krankenhaus. Interdisziplinäre Zusammenarbeit und Perspektivwechsel in Gesundheitsförderung und Prävention, hg. von Constanze Schulze-Stampa, Gabriele Schmid, Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2021, S. 37-54.


- Reliable sources include: reputable newspapers, magazines, academic journals, and books from respected publishers.
- Unacceptable sources include: personal blogs, social media, predatory publishers, most tabloids, and websites where anyone can contribute.
Replace any unreliable sources with high-quality sources. If you cannot find a reliable source for the material, it should be removed.