'The Return of the Repressed' shows original documents from the artist's recently discovered psychoanalytic writings, as well as drawings and sculptures, in the house of the founding father of psychoanalysis. Works on display includes pieces such as 'The Dangerous Obsession', 'the woven fabric text I Am Afraid' and drawings and four gouache on paper works from the 2007 series 'The Feeding. Janus Fleuri' sometimes considered the most significant of all Bourgeois's works.
Curated by Philip Larratt-Smith
The Freud Museum London is delighted to announce an exhibition of works by Louise Bourgeois. Louise Bourgeois: The Return of the Repressed will show original documents from the artist’s recently discovered psychoanalytic writings, as well as drawings and sculptures, in the house of the founding father of psychoanalysis. Following its first showing in Latin America, the exhibition has been re-imagined for the unique setting of the Freud Museum London, which was discussed as a venue by Louise Bourgeois before her death. Appropriately, in the final home of Sigmund Freud and his daughter Anna Freud, this exhibition will explore the artist’s complex and ambivalent engagement with the theory and practice of psychoanalysis.
Louise Bourgeois was born in Paris in 1911 and lived in the United States from 1938 until her death in 2010. She became one of the best known artists of the 20th century, whose work has inspired a rich commentary from academics and critics alike. What is not generally known is that she also undertook a psychoanalysis spanning three decades. The exhibition is based on the discovery of two boxes of writings by her longtime assistant Jerry Gorovoy at the beginning of 2004, and two more in early 2010. These constitute an archive of over one thousand loose sheets recording her reactions to her psychoanalytic treatment from 1951; several texts refer directly to Dr. Henry Lowenfeld, whom she saw from 1952 to 1982. In some cases these texts complement existing diaries that she kept throughout her life, while in others they serve to fill in the gaps for those years in which she did not keep a diary.
The exhibition will raise fundamental questions about the relationship between art and life, and the therapeutic nature of art itself. To curator Larratt-Smith, who has served as the literary archivist of the Louise Bourgeois Archives since 2002: ‘The discovery of the psychoanalytic writings has enriched and augmented our understanding of Bourgeois’s work and life immeasurably. They represent a distinct contribution to art history as well as to the field of psychoanalysis.’ The exhibition foregrounds the importance of these writings, displaying nearly fifty original manuscripts for the first time and ranging from sketches, notes, dream recordings, lists and drawings.
Sculptures and drawings on display will include pieces such as The Dangerous Obsession (2003), the woven fabric text I Am Afraid (2009), and drawings and four gouache on paper works from the 2007 series The Feeding. Janus Fleuri (1968), sometimes considered the most significant of all Bourgeois’s works, will also come into Freud’s home.
Related Resources
The exhibition is accompanied by a major two-volume publication, to be published by Violette Editions in March 2012, and edited by Philip Larratt-Smith. A selection of these private writings by Louise Bourgeois about her work, her family and her state of mind, appear here in print for the first time in English, complemented in the first volume with essays by Bourgeois scholars and prominent academics, including Philip Larratt-Smith, Donald Kuspit, Elisabeth Bronfen, Meg Harris Williams, Juliet Mitchell, Mignon Nixon and Paul Verhaeghe & Julie De Ganck.
Louise Bourgeois: The Return of the Repressed (£49.95 rrp) will be sold at a special price of £40 at the Freud Museum during the exhibition and is otherwise available at all art bookstores and online.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a comprehensive events programme, to include a conference featuring some of the academic contributors to the catalogue.
The exhibition is made possible due to the generosity of the Louise Bourgeois Trust, The Easton Foundation, Hauser & Wirth, Kukje Gallery, Cheim & Read and the Henry Moore Foundation.
Image: Louise Bourgeois working on SLEEP II in Italy, 1967. Photo: Studio Fotografico, Carrara, © The Easton Foundation
Opening 8 march
The Freud Museum
20 Maresfield Gardens London
Hours: Wednesday 12 - 8pm. Thursday and Friday 12 – 5pm. Saturday and Sunday 11 – 5pm