The various art works were assembled for exhibition with Sigmund Freud’s famous essay ‘Das Unheimliche’ (1919), in mind. Often referred to as ‘The Uncanny’, ‘Das Unheimliche’ actually translates into English as ‘The Unhomely’, and the essay identifies "the familiar, tame, intimate, friendly, etc." that can somehow excite "fear in general". The exhibition was made in response to the permanent collection at Kettle’s Yard, the former home of collector Jim Ede and could in some ways be seen as a corrupted version of his home and collection, with works variously reflecting the forms and ideas of thing permanently on display in the house. Furnishings, fixtures and fittings are made to appear, in different ways, inexplicable, uncomfortable or supe...
Brass Art’s intervention into Freud’s house attempted to grant its solid objects, furniture and room...
© 2017 Dr Amelia SullyIn this thesis, I focus on the exhibition of a series of five sculptures in ‘R...
By what means do objects become significant to individuals? What experiences shape our relationship ...
Over his long life Sigmund Freud collected at least 2500 antiquities, most of which are now on view ...
The simulated domestic setting of 1 Godley VC House is synonymous with Freud’s 1919 essay Das Unheim...
Performances from Brass Art (Lewis, Mojsiewicz, Pettican), captured at the Freud Museum, London, usi...
In 1906 Ernst Jentsch first considered the idea of the uncanny in his essay, On the Psychology of th...
Camberwell Space is pleased to present an exhibition with Caroline Achaintre, Jacques-André Boiffard...
What part of us, willingly projects life into things that in all common sense are not alive? In obje...
The exhibition features objects that blend drawing and sculptures into pieces that fluctuate between...
Catalogue essay for Hannes Zebedin exhibition at Secession, Vienna. The essay explores Zebedin's wor...
This essay grew out of my curatorial work and my essay 'The Uncommon Object: Surrealist Concepts and...
Central to this essay are fourteen poems and fourteen drawings. They formed part of the exhibition T...
Abstract _ The essay analyses the bourgeois parlour as the ‘world theatre’ (the expression is by Wal...
It would be wrong to suggest that this essay is in any way a comprehensive study of brutal sculpture...
Brass Art’s intervention into Freud’s house attempted to grant its solid objects, furniture and room...
© 2017 Dr Amelia SullyIn this thesis, I focus on the exhibition of a series of five sculptures in ‘R...
By what means do objects become significant to individuals? What experiences shape our relationship ...
Over his long life Sigmund Freud collected at least 2500 antiquities, most of which are now on view ...
The simulated domestic setting of 1 Godley VC House is synonymous with Freud’s 1919 essay Das Unheim...
Performances from Brass Art (Lewis, Mojsiewicz, Pettican), captured at the Freud Museum, London, usi...
In 1906 Ernst Jentsch first considered the idea of the uncanny in his essay, On the Psychology of th...
Camberwell Space is pleased to present an exhibition with Caroline Achaintre, Jacques-André Boiffard...
What part of us, willingly projects life into things that in all common sense are not alive? In obje...
The exhibition features objects that blend drawing and sculptures into pieces that fluctuate between...
Catalogue essay for Hannes Zebedin exhibition at Secession, Vienna. The essay explores Zebedin's wor...
This essay grew out of my curatorial work and my essay 'The Uncommon Object: Surrealist Concepts and...
Central to this essay are fourteen poems and fourteen drawings. They formed part of the exhibition T...
Abstract _ The essay analyses the bourgeois parlour as the ‘world theatre’ (the expression is by Wal...
It would be wrong to suggest that this essay is in any way a comprehensive study of brutal sculpture...
Brass Art’s intervention into Freud’s house attempted to grant its solid objects, furniture and room...
© 2017 Dr Amelia SullyIn this thesis, I focus on the exhibition of a series of five sculptures in ‘R...
By what means do objects become significant to individuals? What experiences shape our relationship ...