Help save Sigmund Freud’s library
Donate or Adopt a Book and help save the library that shaped the creation of the ‘talking cure’
Provocations, or Difficult Conversations in the Home of the Talking Cure
A series of events that will bring some of the sharpest minds and most engaging stories and topics of our times to be explored and discussed in Sigmund Freud’s final home.
Little House A, Maresfield Gardens NW3
Explore our neighbour's Arts and Craft garden at Little House A, which has frequently been described as magical.
When Words are not Enough: Creative Responses to Grief
The Good Grief Project I’m delighted that we’ll be joined by author Jane Harris and Dr. Kathryn Mannix on Wednesday 15th March, 6pm, where they’ll discuss the ground-breaking book When Words are not Enough: Creative Responses to Grief. This first publication from ‘The Good Grief Project’ explores the many ways bereaved families express their loss. […]
Unstable objects: On Curating Freud’s Antiquity: Object, Idea, Desire
‘A Curator in his own Museum’ The act of curating is bound up with the very beginnings of psychoanalysis. From the time when Freud began to practice, we know that he started to surround himself with antiquities. We also know that these antiquities populated his working space in 19 Berggasse, not his private apartment. This […]
Charity Event and Auction
This event, kindly sponsored by the Institute for Digital Archaeology, is to be held at the Freud Museum in aid of charities to support Ukraine, the Keats-Shelley Memorial Association and the Freud Museum London.
A Pentelic Marble Copy of the Selene Horse
A meticulously produced copy in Pentelic marble of the head of the horse of Selene from the Parthenon sculptures was unveiled at the Freud Museum London.
Researching the life and work of Marie Bonaparte | Part 1
Dr Shilyh Warren (University of Texas at Dallas), our Writer in Residence, traces Princess Marie Bonaparte’s life and relationship with the Freud family in the Museum’s displays and Archives.
An Evening with Vanessa Redgrave and Lord Dubs
a new exhibition about unsung heroine Muriel Gardiner was launched with readings, memories and discussion by legendary actress Vanessa Redgrave and refugee campaigner Lord Alf Dubs.


