Past Exhibitions
Freud in England, 1938-39
This exhibition tells the story of the last year of Sigmund Freud's life, his escape with his family from Nazi rule in Vienna, settling into a new home in London, his continuing illness and final days shortly after the outbreak of the Second World War.
Santiago Borja – Divan: Free-Floating Attention Piece
The Freud Museum London proudly hosted Divan: Free-Floating Attention Piece, a site specific project by Mexican artist Santiago Borja.
Andreas Hofer – Andy Hope 1930 At The Freud
Berlin-based artist Andreas Hofer created a new series of works for Sigmund Freud’s house, including paintings, collages, sculptures and site-specific installations.
Promised Lands: Freud’s Exiles
Promised Lands: Freud's Exiles is a historical exhibition exploring the cultural background and historical forces that determined the fate of Sigmund Freud and his family, and how he became a refugee at the end of his life.
Mat Collishaw – Hysteria
Mat Collishaw created a new series of works for Sigmund Freud's house that include sculptures, projections and site-specific installations.
Einfall: Beyond Spontaneity
Contemporary Ceramic & Glass artists and designers explore the Freud Museum in an exhibition of site-responsive works.
Myths in Mind
This exhibition gave visitors the chance to see some of Freud’s most precious antiquities at closer quarters, and put them in the context of myth and legend to which they belong.
Bracha Ettinger – Resonance/ Overlay/ Interweave: In the Freudian Space of Memory and Migration
Exhibition curated by Griselda Pollock (CentreCATH, Leeds)
In this deeply cathected space of memory and migration, the former home of two exiles, Anna and Sigmund Freud, the renowned Israeli artist and psychoanalyst Bracha Ettinger will hold her first major exhibition in Britain since 1993.
Freud’s Wanderlust & Freud’s Exiles
Freud travelled as a tourist. He also had to travel as an refugee.
The Laws of the Father: Freud / Gross / Kafka
The early years of psychoanalysis came during an explosive epoch in modern culture.