The Art of Victor Molev


Click Here to View:   The Art of Victor Molev.  To best appreciate this video, watch at full screen.

This series of enigmatic portraits in which the evident meaning blends into the hidden one is the extraordinary speciality of Victor Molev. We suddenly recognize A. Chekhov in a plain landscape surrounded by naked trees, and see the face of Albert Einstein in randomly scattered blocks. the Mona Lisa, the Beatles, and many other celebrities are seen through the artist’s unique transformative vision.

Sigmund Freud by Victor Molev

Photography Friday: Jonathon Miller

A Passage in the Sidon Souk

Jonathon Miller has been an analysand for eighteen months. Since beginning analysis, he says, “I have become increasingly interested in the objects that I want to photograph and their relation to my unconscious mind. I have found that there is almost always a relation between these objects and my unconscious mind, which can take some time for me to become consciously aware of.”

If you would like to submit photographs for consideration for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s  Photography Friday, please send your jpeg images to Joel Seligmann, the photography editor.

Neuropathologies of the Self: A General Theory with Todd Feinberg at NYPSI

PLEASE JOIN NYPSI FOR A YEAR LONG CELEBRATION OF OUR CENTENARY
CELEBRATING A CENTURY OF ADVANCEMENT THROUGH SELF-KNOWLEDGE
THE NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE:

Arnold Pfeffer Center for Neuropsychoanalysis
247 East 82nd St., between 2nd & 3rd, NY, NY, 10028
Saturday, February 5, 2011
10 am – 12 pm
Todd Feinberg, M.D.
Professor of Neurology & Psychiatry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Chief of the Yarmon Neurobehavior & Alzheimer’s Disease Center of Beth Israel Medical Center

Neuropathologies of the Self: A General Theory 
Discussant: Mark Solms, Ph.D.
Continue reading Neuropathologies of the Self: A General Theory with Todd Feinberg at NYPSI

Nominations for the 2011 Sigourney Award

Nominations for the 2011 Sigourney Award are now open. Nominees for 2011 are limited to persons who are citizens and residents of, and organizations located in, countries other than the United States and Western Europe. The Award is granted to individuals and organizations whose significant contributions have generated new interest and activity in psychoanalysis and related disciplines. The Award may be granted to nominees who have made major contributions to clinical psychoanalysis or psychoanalytical research, including its application to the fields of medicine, psychiatry, or other sciences, the humanities, or the public good. The Award also recognizes work that increases the public awareness, as well as the study of, psychoanalysis.