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Sigmund Freud's Figural Psychoanalysis

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Sigmund Freud's research into Michelangelo's Moses and the collection of small sculpted figures from Antiquity that he amassed attest to a visual psychoanalysis that contradicted the reputed iconoc...
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  • 30 June 2026
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Sigmund Freud's research into Michelangelo's Moses and the collection of small sculpted figures from Antiquity that he amassed attest to a visual psychoanalysis that contradicted the reputed iconoclasm of that discipline. Freud himself drew inspiration from items in his collection; but he also incorporated these into the treatment of his patients. As revealed by this book, what we now know of these aspects of his life and work may serve as a key to a deeper understanding of his theory of the unconscious.

In order to use to best advantage his preoccupation with the visual, Freud was obliged to conceal this aspect of his psychoanalytic method, to "veil" it. This in itself reveals how far psychoanalysis, as a space of liberation, could nonetheless be subject to cultural constraints, not least the prohibition of images in the Mosaic tradition. In nonetheless persisting in his transgression, Freud was able to establish a space beneficially invested with imagery, in which the images of trauma could be overcome.

  • Freud’s collection of ancient small-scale sculptures interpreted in light of newly discovered sources
  • In-depth analysis of Edmund Engelman’s photographs of Freud’s studies
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Price: $30.99
Pages: 160
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: dG Arts
Publication Date: 30 June 2026
ISBN: 9783689242442
Format: Paperback
BISACs: Theory of art, History of scholarship (principally of social sciences and humanities), Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology
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Horst Bredekamp is Professor em. of Art and Image History at Humboldt University, Berlin and, since 2019, Senior Speaker for the Excellenzcluster Matters of Activity. Author of numerous books and articles, he has received a great many awards, among them the Sigmund Freud Prize (2001), the Max Planck Research Prize (2006) and the Schiller Prize (2017).