This has always been a favorite topic of mine, early CIA-sponsored LSD experiments in the 50's and 60's. I found this website chronicling an artist under the influence.
That is an amazing progression, so exciting :) I would have loved to have been in on this, especially these early tests into creativity and subjective experience. For a long time, I considered going into this kind of research, but unfortunately a bunch of over-enthusiastic hippies went and got it illegalized. Only now, after 40 years of complete supression are psychedelics getting another chance to prove themselves as useful spiritual and psychological tools.
(x-posted to
thelunarsociety)
These 9 drawings were done by an artist under the influence of LSD -- part of a test conducted by the US government during it's dalliance with psychotomimetic drugs in the late 1950's. The artist was given a dose of LSD 25 and free access to an activity box full of crayons and pencils. His subject is the medico that jabbed him.First drawing is done 20 minutes after the first dose (50ug) An attending doctor observes - Patient chooses to start drawing with charcoal. The subject of the experiment reports - 'Condition normal... no effect from the drug yet'.
85 minutes after first dose and 20 minutes after a second dose has been administered (50ug + 50ug) The patient seems euphoric. 'I can see you clearly, so clearly. This... you... it's all ... I'm having a little trouble controlling this pencil. It seems to want to keep going.'
2 hours 30 minutes after first dose. Patient appears very focus on the business of drawing. 'Outlines seem normal, but very vivid - everything is changing colour. My hand must follow the bold sweep of the lines. I feel as if my consciousness is situated in the part of my body that's now active - my hand, my elbow... my tongue'.
2 hours 32 minutes after first dose. Patient seems gripped by his pad of paper. 'I'm trying another drawing. The outlines of the model are normal, but now those of my drawing are not. The outline of my hand is going weird too. It's not a very good drawing is it? I give up - I'll try again...'
2 hours 35 minutes after first dose. Patient follows quickly with another drawing. 'I'll do a drawing in one flourish... without stopping... one line, no break!' Upon completing the drawing the patient starts laughing, then becomes startled by something on the floor.
2 hours 45 minutes after first dose. Patient tries to climb into activity box, and is generally agitated - responds slowly to the suggestion he might like to draw some more. He has become largely none verbal. 'I am... everything is... changed... they're calling... your face... interwoven... who is...' Patient mumbles inaudibly to a tune (sounds like 'Thanks for the memory). He changes medium to Tempera.
4 hours 25 minutes after first dose. Patient retreated to the bunk, spending approximately 2 hours lying, waving his hands in the air. His return to the activity box is sudden and deliberate, changing media to pen and water colour. 'This will be the best drawing, Like the first one, only better. If I'm not careful I'll lose control of my movements, but I won't, because I know. I know' - (this saying is then repeated many times). Patient makes the last half-a-dozen strokes of the drawing while running back and forth across the room.
5 hours 45 minutes after first dose. Patient continues to move about the room, intersecting the space in complex variations. It's an hour and a half before he settles down to draw again - he appears over the effects of the drug. 'I can feel my knees again, I think it's starting to wear off. This is a pretty good drawing - this pencil is mighty hard to hold' - (he is holding a crayon).
8 hours after first dose. Patient sits on bunk bed. He reports the intoxication has worn off except for the occational distorting of our faces. We ask for a final drawing which he performs with little enthusiasm. 'I have nothing to say about this last drawing, it is bad and uninteresting, I want to go home now.'
That is an amazing progression, so exciting :) I would have loved to have been in on this, especially these early tests into creativity and subjective experience. For a long time, I considered going into this kind of research, but unfortunately a bunch of over-enthusiastic hippies went and got it illegalized. Only now, after 40 years of complete supression are psychedelics getting another chance to prove themselves as useful spiritual and psychological tools.
(x-posted to









no subject
Date: 2006-08-18 08:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-18 09:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-18 08:52 pm (UTC)best lines that made me laugh very hard:
Upon completing the drawing the patient starts laughing, then becomes startled by something on the floor.
and
atient tries to climb into activity box
the end is good too :)
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Date: 2006-08-18 09:17 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2006-08-18 09:49 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-08-18 10:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-18 10:27 pm (UTC)Harvard and some other colleges are starting testing again so perhaps there's hope.
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Date: 2006-08-18 10:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-18 10:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-08-19 02:33 am (UTC)EXACTLY....
Date: 2006-08-19 02:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-19 04:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-19 11:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-19 08:20 am (UTC)They got some spiders in a lab and gave them tiny spider-size samples of different drugs (injected their prey with the drugs then the spiders consumed them)then took photos of the results of their webs while under the influence. Basically it's this website (http://cannabis.net/weblife.html), but sorely & inaccuratly captioned.
The first shot is (and I'm quoting from the book bc it was mislabled off all the other websites too)-
"A Normal Web has the familiar spider architecture. The most efficient snare in nature, it nonetheless has many flaws.
Pervitin, a Benezedrinelike stimulant makes the spider too impatient to circle the center. It spins only in one small area.
Chloral Hydrate, the barman's "Mickey Finn" puts the spider to sleep after it has completed only a small part of its web.
No photo found, but just the sole foundations of the web were constructed.
Caffeine produces the arachnid equivalent to human coffee nerves, making the spider spin a haphazard tangle of threads.
Then magially: Lysergic acid induces acute concentration. The spider zealously weaves a perfect web, greatly improving on nature.
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Date: 2006-08-19 11:07 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2006-08-19 11:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-19 02:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-19 11:04 pm (UTC)well this is gonna be long...
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Date: 2006-08-22 02:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-27 06:10 am (UTC)Damn hippies!