ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1989 Pictures at an Exhibition brings together a rich collection of essays, representing the diversity of views and approaches among professionals towards art and psychoanalysis and art therapy. The editors, both of whom are practising art therapists and art therapy educators, have arranged the contributions so that they may be read in a way similar to looking at pictures in a gallery: they can be glanced at briefly or lingered over, read consecutively or dipped into at random. Artists, art therapists, psychotherapists, psychiatrists and art historians will all find something of interest, and something to stimulate thought and discussion.

Contributions include innovative papers on the relationship between artists’ lives and the subject-matter of their work; the work of Kandinsky, Picasso, Magritte, Moore, Lear and Genet is looked at in particular. Generously illustrated, the book also highlights the importance of language and culture in attempting to understand imagery. Each contribution is linked by editorial comments drawing together the threads of concern which are common to art and psychiatry.

part one

Psychoanalytic views of the arts

chapter |4 pages

Commentary

chapter Three|8 pages

Fantasy and the figurative

chapter Four|11 pages

Chagall's erotic imagery

chapter Seven|10 pages

Art, therapy, and Romanticism

part two|125 pages

From theory into practice

chapter |5 pages

Commentary

chapter Nine|14 pages

The Primitive Scratch

chapter Twelve|9 pages

The picture within the frame

chapter Thirteen|11 pages

Group analytic art groups

chapter Fifteen|10 pages

Musing cross culturally

chapter Sixteen|9 pages

The psychic roots of drama

chapter Nineteen|10 pages

Art therapy in search of a lost twin