Don’t miss our major exhibition Women & Freud: Patients, Pioneers, Artists (30 October 2024-5 May 2025). Supported by the Marie-Louise von Motesiczky Trust.

1920/2020: Freud and Pandemic

One hundred years ago, Sigmund Freud lived through a global pandemic. This topical new exhibition explores the similarities between Freud’s experience of the Spanish Flu and the current COVID-19 pandemic, its impact on mental health and the response by psychoanalysts.

19 May 2021 to 12 September 2021

Visit the exhibition online: Online Stories 1920/2020: Freud & Pandemic

The global COVID-19 pandemic shares many similarities with the Spanish Flu that ravaged the world after the First World War. Here we explore how Freud reacted to that crisis and how modern psychoanalysis has responded in 2020.

The Spanish Flu pandemic struck the Freud family with tragic results. Sophie Halberstadt-Freud, Freud’s beloved daughter, died suddenly from the influenza while pregnant with her third child. Freud and his wife Martha were devastated.

Although the Spanish Flu and COVID-19 are different strains of diseases, similar measures were taken by governments worldwide and by individuals. Schools, shops and restaurants closed, restrictions were placed on transportation and social distancing was encouraged.

In the midst of this turmoil and tragedy Freud wrote Beyond the Pleasure Principle, attempting to answer a question at the very heart of psychoanalysis. This led to his last great speculative breakthrough, a new ‘dual instinct’ theory represented by the life drive and the death drive.

A new exhibition at the Freud Museum London explores the ways Freud himself responded to the global and personal tragedy of the pandemic in 1918-20. On display will be rarely-seen letters written by Freud to friends and colleagues in the days after Sophie’s death, exposing personal reflections on death and loss.

Alongside these historical reflections will be contemporary psychoanalytic observations of the COVID-19 pandemic, in a series of new short videos featuring contributions from clinicians and researchers. Artworks by Julia Lockheart, who has painted the dreams of frontline health workers as part of the DreamsID project, will also be displayed. DreamsID was launched as an art – science collaboration in which psychologist Mark Blagrove discusses the dream of an individual while artist Julia Lockheart paints it, using the pages of Freud’s famous book The Interpretation of Dreams as canvas.

Isolation, online therapy and social upheavals have profoundly affected our inner lives and posed important questions about clinical theory and the future of the mental health provision.

Dream of a robin scratching away Covid-19 from around the lungs (30th May 2020). Julia Lockheart, DreamsID.

Please note that the dates for this exhibition are subject to change. The Freud Museum is working hard to adapt to government guidelines and will re-open as soon as possible.

 

Visit the Exhibition Online

Online Stories 1920/2020: Freud & PandemicVisit our exhibition 1920/2020: Freud & Pandemic online now. Explore the connections between psychoanalysis, life and art through our permanent and temporary exhibitions.

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Exhibition Dates

19 May to 12 September 2021

Tickets can now be booked online. Details on planning your visit and making a booking can be found on our Visit page.

Opening Times

Wednesday: 10:30 – 17:00
Saturday: 10:30 – 17:00
Sunday: 10:30 – 17:00

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