
HIDDEN GIFTS explores the mysterious relationship between artistic expression and mental illness through the story of Scotsman Angus MacPhee, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1946 and sent to the Craig Dunain Psychiatric Hospital near Inverness.

Although MacPhee was a patient there for fifty years, in a case of elective mutism he spoke not a single word to any of the hospital staff. The sole expression of "the quiet big man" was his solitary weaving of clothes-including coats, gloves and boots-from grass, samples of which are seen on display in an art gallery.

The film discusses MacPhee's work as an example of art produced by someone who has escaped social conditioning and who, because he lives in a dream world, has direct access to his unconscious mind, and is therefore intuitively creative, who, indeed, has a compulsion to create.
In addition to video footage of MacPhee late in his life, HIDDEN GIFTS features interviews with Joyce Laing, an art therapist, who discovered his work, staff members at the psychiatric hospital, and Peggy MacPhee, Angus's sister, who recount their experiences with this creator of what Laing refers to as "art extraordinary."
“Makes a contribution to our understanding of creativity and mental illness.” —Rob Harle, Leonardo Reviews
2009 WPA Western Psychological Association Conference
Jury Award, 2008 Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival
Best Documentary, 2005 Britspotting Festival
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Nominee
Official Selection, 2005 Parnu International Documentary and Anthropology Film Festival
Official Selection, 2005 Monterrey International Film Festival