Provider: Kate Liu/¼B¬ö¶² from Art and Psychoanalysis
Laurie Schneider Adams
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"Born in 452 in the
little village of Vinci outside Florence, Leonardo was the illegitimate
son of a notary, Ser Piero, and a peasant girl, Caterina. Leonardo
lived with Caterina . Leonardo lived with Caterina for approximately
five years before entering the house of his father, who had in the
meantime married Donna Albiera. Later--at what age is not known--Leonardo
was apprenticed to Andrea del Verrochhio, a leading Florentine artist.
p. 15
Mona Lisa --the woman who posed for Mona Lisa smile in a way that reawakened the artist's repressed memory of his mother's smile. Eissler related the ambiguity of Mona Lisa's smile to the artist's ambivalence toward his mother. [Duchamp's corrected readymade.] [Leonardo's tendencies to art and scientific investigation.] | |
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sublimation "Freud explains Leonardo's psychology in terms of classical drive theory as follows. His instinct for loving was transformed first into insatiable research, which later substituted for creating art. What had begun, in Leonardo's case, as investigation in the service of art took over and became the master. Freud's discovery of infantile led him to connect adult research with childhood sexual curiosity. In Leonardo's case, Freud concludes, the artist renounced passion and emotion by redirecting affective energy into intellectual investigation. p. 16 p. 25 [his instinctual sexual curiosity sublimated into science 25 missing father (1) Mother's smile --
Mona Lisa's smile |
St. John's androgenous image Freud attributed the mysterious smile in that picture to having found the secret of love, which he keeps from the observer. ..."It is possible," Freud concluded this section, "that . . . Leonardo has denied the unhappines of his erotic life and has triumphed over it in his art., by representing the wishes of the boy, infatuated with his mother, as fulfilled in this blissful union of the male and female natures." 23 father's influence (2)
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[many arguments against
Freud] e.g. Schapiro -- " I believe this study of Freuds book points to weakness which will be found in other works by psychoanalsis in the cultural fields: the habit of building explanations of complex phenomena on a single datum and the too little attneion given to history and social situation in dealing with individuals and even with individuals and even with the origin of customs, beliefs and institutions. Pictures
from
CGFA
(external)
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