The purpose of this study was to assess quantitative and qualitative changes that occurred in the drawing of the human figure during depression and dementia in the elderly. A modified scale version of the Draw a Person Test (DAP) is presented. The first study (80 subjects) enabled the reduction of the number of items from 73 to 20 according to interrater reliability and diagnostic sensitivity to differentiate patients with dementia from control subjects. The second study (160 subjects: 51 with dementia, 70 with major depression, 39 elderly controls) used this 20-item DAP for cognitive assessment. The second study also featured an additional qualitative assessment (DAP 50) considering five components based upon a projective examination of the drawings. Combination of the 20-item DAP and the DAP 50 provides a complete approach to patients in accordance with the affective dimension. Results showed the ability of the 20-item DAP to discriminate dementia from depression with a better cutoff score of 7 and the usefulness of the DAP 50 in the investigation of impaired components during depression and dementia in the elderly, with the goal of specifying key aspects of psychopathology in dementia.