ABSTRACT

James Hamilton's engaging book offers us his own unique insight into the unconscious factors involved in the creative processes associated with painting, filmmaking, and photography by studying the lives and works of a number of artists, each one having a unique personal style. In separate chapters, he looks at the lives and works of Mark Rothko, Joseph Cornell, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Clement Greenberg, Edward Weston, Ingmar Bergman, Francois Truffaut, Quentin Tarantino, and Florian von Donnersmarck from a psychoanalytic perspective with emphasis on unconscious motivation and the quest for mastery of intrapsychic conflict. The book is bound to encourage further questions and hypotheses about the nature of these complex phenomena.

chapter One|24 pages

Mark Rothko

chapter Two|16 pages

Joseph Cornell

chapter Three|30 pages

Piet Mondrian

chapter Four|12 pages

Pablo Picasso

chapter Five|22 pages

Clement Greenberg

chapter Six|20 pages

Edward Weston

chapter Seven|10 pages

Ingmar Bergman

chapter Eight|32 pages

François Truffaut

chapter Nine|20 pages

Quentin Tarantino

chapter Ten|6 pages

Florian von Donnersmarck