Description

Book Synopsis

Melanie Klein was a Viennese psychoanalyst who extended the work of Sigmund Freud in significant and innovative ways. She lived and worked in the UK from 1926 until her death in 1959. During her life she was a controversial and divisive figure and has remained so since her death; conflict between the Freudian and Kleinian strands of psychoanalysis dominated the history of psychoanalysis in the latter half of the twentieth century. The reasons why she polarised opinion are multiple and complex; partly they were related to her psychoanalytic ideas and how she expressed them but they were also intrinsic to her personality.

In 2016, a pair of delicate low relief sculptures of Melanie Klein in profile were re-discovered, having been hidden away for some eighty years, and have been subsequently identified as the work of the sculptor Oscar Nemon. Roger Amos was asked to write a brief article about these sculptures for publication on the Melanie Klein Trust website. During his research, he discovered that Klein had destroyed two significant works of art depicting herself: one a bust by the same sculptor as the low relief profiles, Oscar Nemon, and the other a portrait by William Coldstream.

This beautifully illustrated book is the first comprehensive review of all attempts to portray Klein during her lifetime, from her earliest childhood until her old age, including the work of painters, sculptors, and portrait photographers. It reviews the history of each artistic project and the relationship between Klein and the artist involved, locating them in a narrative of Klein’s life. The complex and interrelated reasons why she chose to destroy some of the representations of herself but kept others are identified and discussed. Through an understanding of the subject/artist relationship, Amos illuminates Klein’s professional life in the world of psychoanalysis.

A must-read for all scholars and professionals working in the field of psychoanalysis, psychotherapy and psychodynamic counselling, plus those with an interest in Melanie Klein or aesthetics, this enjoyable read shines a never-before seen light on to the world of Melanie Klein.



Trade Review

Roger Amos has written and illustrated a fascinating work on the relationships between Melanie Klein and the artists who portrayed her. This book sheds important new light on her character and also on those of the photographers and artists.

-- John Steiner, Treasurer of the Melanie Klein Trust

In this carefully researched and often moving book, Roger Amos brings together the worlds of portraiture and psychoanalysis. In an articulate and sympathetic way, with wonderful illustrations, the author addresses the sometimes strained relationships between the pioneering psychoanalyst Melanie Klein and the artists who tried to capture her essential qualities in their work.

-- Jane Milton, Honorary Archivist, Melanie Klein Trust

Roger Amos’ vivid and straightforward account of the ways in which Melanie Klein reacted to pictures of her touches on feelings we may all have about 'being seen'.

-- Irma Brenman Pick, past President of the British Psychoanalytical Society

At the heart of Roger Amos’ work is a haunting question: Why did Melanie Klein destroy two works of art created of her, a bust by Oscar Nemon and a painting by William Coldstream? Amos addresses this question with in-depth research and an artist’s intuitive grasp of mood, tone, and emotional resonance. The reader will be rewarded with a compassionate insight into a complex personality.

-- Donald Campbell, past President of the British Psychoanalytical Society

Table of Contents

About the author

List of Figures

Introduction

Chapter 1: Early Life – Childhood and Adolescence, Vienna 1882 to 1902

Chapter 2: Married Life, Budapest 1903 to 1914

Chapter 3: The Unrecorded Decade, Budapest and Berlin 1915 to 1925

Chapter 4: Middle Years – Life in London 1926 to 1950

Chapter 5: Melanie Klein and Oscar Nemon 1939

Chapter 6: Later Life in London – 1950 to 1960

Chapter 7: Melanie Klein and William Coldstream 1952

Conclusion

References

Index

Portrait of a Life: Melanie Klein and the Artists

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    A Hardback by Roger Amos

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      View other formats and editions of Portrait of a Life: Melanie Klein and the Artists by Roger Amos

      Publisher: Karnac Books
      Publication Date: 26/07/2019
      ISBN13: 9781912691418, 978-1912691418
      ISBN10: 1912691418

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Melanie Klein was a Viennese psychoanalyst who extended the work of Sigmund Freud in significant and innovative ways. She lived and worked in the UK from 1926 until her death in 1959. During her life she was a controversial and divisive figure and has remained so since her death; conflict between the Freudian and Kleinian strands of psychoanalysis dominated the history of psychoanalysis in the latter half of the twentieth century. The reasons why she polarised opinion are multiple and complex; partly they were related to her psychoanalytic ideas and how she expressed them but they were also intrinsic to her personality.

      In 2016, a pair of delicate low relief sculptures of Melanie Klein in profile were re-discovered, having been hidden away for some eighty years, and have been subsequently identified as the work of the sculptor Oscar Nemon. Roger Amos was asked to write a brief article about these sculptures for publication on the Melanie Klein Trust website. During his research, he discovered that Klein had destroyed two significant works of art depicting herself: one a bust by the same sculptor as the low relief profiles, Oscar Nemon, and the other a portrait by William Coldstream.

      This beautifully illustrated book is the first comprehensive review of all attempts to portray Klein during her lifetime, from her earliest childhood until her old age, including the work of painters, sculptors, and portrait photographers. It reviews the history of each artistic project and the relationship between Klein and the artist involved, locating them in a narrative of Klein’s life. The complex and interrelated reasons why she chose to destroy some of the representations of herself but kept others are identified and discussed. Through an understanding of the subject/artist relationship, Amos illuminates Klein’s professional life in the world of psychoanalysis.

      A must-read for all scholars and professionals working in the field of psychoanalysis, psychotherapy and psychodynamic counselling, plus those with an interest in Melanie Klein or aesthetics, this enjoyable read shines a never-before seen light on to the world of Melanie Klein.



      Trade Review

      Roger Amos has written and illustrated a fascinating work on the relationships between Melanie Klein and the artists who portrayed her. This book sheds important new light on her character and also on those of the photographers and artists.

      -- John Steiner, Treasurer of the Melanie Klein Trust

      In this carefully researched and often moving book, Roger Amos brings together the worlds of portraiture and psychoanalysis. In an articulate and sympathetic way, with wonderful illustrations, the author addresses the sometimes strained relationships between the pioneering psychoanalyst Melanie Klein and the artists who tried to capture her essential qualities in their work.

      -- Jane Milton, Honorary Archivist, Melanie Klein Trust

      Roger Amos’ vivid and straightforward account of the ways in which Melanie Klein reacted to pictures of her touches on feelings we may all have about 'being seen'.

      -- Irma Brenman Pick, past President of the British Psychoanalytical Society

      At the heart of Roger Amos’ work is a haunting question: Why did Melanie Klein destroy two works of art created of her, a bust by Oscar Nemon and a painting by William Coldstream? Amos addresses this question with in-depth research and an artist’s intuitive grasp of mood, tone, and emotional resonance. The reader will be rewarded with a compassionate insight into a complex personality.

      -- Donald Campbell, past President of the British Psychoanalytical Society

      Table of Contents

      About the author

      List of Figures

      Introduction

      Chapter 1: Early Life – Childhood and Adolescence, Vienna 1882 to 1902

      Chapter 2: Married Life, Budapest 1903 to 1914

      Chapter 3: The Unrecorded Decade, Budapest and Berlin 1915 to 1925

      Chapter 4: Middle Years – Life in London 1926 to 1950

      Chapter 5: Melanie Klein and Oscar Nemon 1939

      Chapter 6: Later Life in London – 1950 to 1960

      Chapter 7: Melanie Klein and William Coldstream 1952

      Conclusion

      References

      Index

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