An analysis of Freud's antiquities and their relationship to his psychoanalytic ideas around archaeology as a metaphor for understanding the human subject and the process of psychoanalysis as a therapeutic. This is invoked by looking at Susan Hiller's At the Freud Museum (1994), a site-responsive installation held at the Freud Museum London
This project is interested in developing a spatial reading of Sigmund Freud’s work to understand how...
The unconscious pervades every aspect of our life. It shapes concealed conflicts and repressed desir...
This article is a comparative reflection on the modes of inquiry proposed by two disciplines or prac...
An analysis of Hiller's site-responsive intervention 'At the Freud Museum' (1994) as an invocation o...
An analysis of Hiller's site-responsive intervention 'At the Freud Museum' (1994) as an invocation o...
Sigmund Freud spent the final year of his life at 20 Maresfield Gardens, London, surrounded by all h...
Over his long life Sigmund Freud collected at least 2500 antiquities, most of which are now on view ...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
From the Freud Museum is an installation of fifty labelled archival boxes containing small objects, ...
Three works: 'Woganfreude', 'Cure for a Hannover' and 'In Treatment' shown in group exhibition, 'Way...
In this article, the author considers the extent to which site-responsive contemporary art can impac...
Joanne Morra will talk about her recent book Inside the Freud Museums: History, Memory and Site-Resp...
The research field is art installation which takes its point of departure from psychoanalytical theo...
In 1931 the first reference to Minoan archaeology appeared in Freud’s psychoanalytic writings. Eight...
At the Freud Museum Brass Art inscribed themselves into the domestic space of Sigmund Freud’s former...
This project is interested in developing a spatial reading of Sigmund Freud’s work to understand how...
The unconscious pervades every aspect of our life. It shapes concealed conflicts and repressed desir...
This article is a comparative reflection on the modes of inquiry proposed by two disciplines or prac...
An analysis of Hiller's site-responsive intervention 'At the Freud Museum' (1994) as an invocation o...
An analysis of Hiller's site-responsive intervention 'At the Freud Museum' (1994) as an invocation o...
Sigmund Freud spent the final year of his life at 20 Maresfield Gardens, London, surrounded by all h...
Over his long life Sigmund Freud collected at least 2500 antiquities, most of which are now on view ...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
From the Freud Museum is an installation of fifty labelled archival boxes containing small objects, ...
Three works: 'Woganfreude', 'Cure for a Hannover' and 'In Treatment' shown in group exhibition, 'Way...
In this article, the author considers the extent to which site-responsive contemporary art can impac...
Joanne Morra will talk about her recent book Inside the Freud Museums: History, Memory and Site-Resp...
The research field is art installation which takes its point of departure from psychoanalytical theo...
In 1931 the first reference to Minoan archaeology appeared in Freud’s psychoanalytic writings. Eight...
At the Freud Museum Brass Art inscribed themselves into the domestic space of Sigmund Freud’s former...
This project is interested in developing a spatial reading of Sigmund Freud’s work to understand how...
The unconscious pervades every aspect of our life. It shapes concealed conflicts and repressed desir...
This article is a comparative reflection on the modes of inquiry proposed by two disciplines or prac...