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Freud and the Visual Origins of Psychoanalysis

By Harvard Museums of Science & Culture

Freud scholars will explore the role of Freud’s drawings and art collection in the development of his psychoanalytic theories, and provide new insights into the man and his mind.

Freud Public Domain

.: Sat, February 20 2021 12pm – 1:30pm.

Ages: 12 to Adults.

Contact

HMSC Programs

hmscprograms@hmsc.harvard.edu

617-496-1638

Registration required

  • Sign-up is ongoing

Free!

Location

  • Only virtual (online or over the phone).

(Virtual) Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments

1 Oxford St
Cambridge, MA 02138
Maraykanka

Additional information

In this panel discussion, marking the opening of the online exhibition The Interpretation of Drawings: Freud and the Visual Origins of Psychoanalysis, noted Freud scholars explore the role of Freud’s drawings and art collection in the development of his psychoanalytic theories, and provide new insights into the man and mind behind some of the most influential and debated therapeutic techniques ever developed.

Advanced registration required. Click here to register for this free virtual event. 

Presented by the Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments and Harvard Museums of Science & Culture

MODERATORS

Peter Galison, Joseph Pellegrino University Professor and Faculty Director, Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, Harvard University

Elizabeth Lunbeck, Professor of the History of Science in Residence, Harvard University

Nimrod Reitman, Exhibit Guest Curator; Visiting Fellow, Department of the History of Science, Harvard University; Researcher, Department of Literary Studies, Ghent University

PANELISTS 

Caroline Jones, Professor in the History, Theory, and Criticism section, Department of Architecture, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Joseph Koerner, Victor S. Thomas Professor of the History of Art and Architecture; Senior Fellow, Society of Fellows; Harvard University

Andreas Mayer, Senior Researcher, Centre Alexandre Koyré, French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS); Professor, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris

Diane O'Donoghue, Director, Program for Public Humanities, Tufts University; Visiting Professor of Public Humanities, Brown University