“Roar” by Hamed Sufi. Hamed is a Pharmacist living in Tehran.
If you would like to have your photography considered for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please send your jpegs to Joel Seligmann, the Photography Editor.
Hindu Shavite Pilgrim, Benares, India by Irv Steinfink. Irv, who lives in Boston, has been a photographer for over forty years.
If you would like to have your photography considered for internationalpsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please email your jpegs to Joel Seligmann, the photography editor.
Autumn, Lake Celeste
Deborah Olesh is a retired science and computer teacher in Queens, NY, where she belongs to a photography club. She also lives on this scenic lake in Garrison, NY.
If you would like your photography to be considered for InternationalPsychoanalysis.net’s Photography Friday, please send your jpegs, along with something about yourself and the photographs, to Joel Seligmann, the photography editor.
Dr. Charles Brenner, by Sebastian Zimmermann
Dr. Brenner served as President of the New York Psychoanalytic Society and was a cornerstone of the Society and Institute, remaining active there for more than 50 years.
“In 2005, I set out to photograph Charles Brenner. Since he had already retired, I met him in his home. While I was photographing him, I noticed a beautiful chess game in the back of his living room. When I asked him about the game, Dr. Brenner said that he had not played in a while. He mentioned that Freud liked to play chess in the coffee houses of Vienna. He added that Freud once compared psychoanalysis to the game of chess where the players could only know with certainty the opening and end-game moves and that the middle was more unpredictable.I spontaneously asked Dr. Brenner if I could photograph him in front of his chess board. He readily agreed. I took a whole series of images of him while he looked at me intently, much like a formidable grand master.I later wondered why I was drawn to photograph Dr. Brenner in front of a chess board. I think to me, at that moment, the game of chess was a metaphor for the warring factions of a mind in conflict.Dr. Brenner’s precise, logical and rule-bound style of psychoanalysis is mirrored in the royal game. And most would agree, Charles Brenner was one of the kings of psychoanalysis.”Sebastian Zimmermann, Psychiatrist and photographer
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.”