The Freud Museum
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20 Maresfield Gardens
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Alice Anderson
dal 13/4/2011 al 4/6/2011

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Freud Museum


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Alice Anderson
Joanna Walker



 
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13/4/2011

Alice Anderson

The Freud Museum, London

In Alice Anderson's Childhood Rituals, Anderson deliberately draws out the fact that the building was Anna Freud's home. She promotes a dialogue with her life and work, thereby taking the focus away from her father. Anna's loom has never before been a major centrepiece of an exhibition at the Museum.


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curated by Joanna Walker

Alice Anderson’s new sculpture ties-up the Freud Museum using thousands of metres of red dolls hair.

Alice Anderson's Childhood Rituals is a new exhibition of sculptures by the French-British artist Alice Anderson, which will be shown at the Freud Museum London from 15 April-5 June 2011. Thousands of metres of dolls hair will be tied around the exterior of the museum in response to her Fictional Childhood Memories – a series of performances she began in 2010.

“I remember the terrible fears I used to have when I was a child left alone at home for many long hours waiting for the return of my mother. At that time I invented rituals for myself to calm my anxieties. These rituals consisted of undoing the thread from seams and I wound these threads around parts of my body and other objects. This obsession became so bad that I started to do the same thing using my hair.”

Inside the museum, Anderson presents a series of new sculptures, including Power Figures, a series of fetish-like new sculptures made from dolls hair and ginger thread wound around her personal objects. Two identical wax dolls, based on the artist’s image, evoke a Machiavellian Mother-Daughter relationship. The Mother Doll is seated at the loom weaving a grid for her Daughter from synthetic hair.

Anderson uses synthetic hair to evoke thread, string, webs and weaving. The dolls hair has a special significance for the artist, connecting her to people and memories. It is colour-matched to her own red hair, inherited from her English Father. In this context of psychoanalysis, it functions as a symbol of the maternal bond.

In Alice Anderson’s Childhood Rituals, Anderson deliberately draws out the fact that the building was Anna Freud’s home. She promotes a dialogue with her life and work, thereby taking the focus away from her father. Anna’s loom has never before been a major centrepiece of an exhibition at the Museum.

For the first time ever, special permission has been given for the façade of the Freud Museum to be part of a site-specific sculpture. The flowing skeins of hair will be woven around the exterior of the house using the same creative process as adopted in Anderson’s Power Figures.
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The exhibition is curated by Joanna Walker and is made possible by the generous support of the National Lottery through Arts Council England, with additional assistance from the Agnes b Endowment Fund.

The show will be accompanied by a full-colour catalogue, with essays on Anderson’s work by Catherine Grenier (Head of Centre Georges Pompidou), and Griselda Pollock (CentreCATH), Leeds University and will include a conversation between curator Joanna Walker and the artist.

Private view 14th April 6.30 - 8.30 pm

The Freud Museum
20 Maresfield Gardens, London NW3 5SX
Opening Hours: Wednesday to Sunday 12 - 17
Admission Charges
Adults: £6.00
Senior Citizens: £4.50
Concessions £3.00 (Students with valid ID cards, children aged 12-16, unemployed persons, disabled persons.
Children under 12: Free

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A.R. Hopwood
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