Monday, February 14, 2011

Cons With A Conventional Oven

Freud and the art of Robert Indiana




Leonardo


Leonardo was the illegitimate son of the notary Ser Piero da Vinci and a peasant girl named Caterina. With Leonardo's mother spent the first years of his life, then go to live in the house of the father, who was married to a certain Albiera. So Leonardo did take two mothers, the natural mother and stepmother Catherine Albiera, that in the painting have been replaced and represented by the Virgin and St. Anne. The picture represents a child with two mothers, who seem to be sisters.

Among his scientific notes is the story of an unusual childhood memory: "... nor the first record of my infants, and 'I felt that, as I was in a cot, a NIBIO were coming to me and I opened my mouth with its tail and with so many times I percotessi queue inside the lips. "

Freud And here ..... ( http://muntu.altervista.org/percorsi/psicoanalisi/Muntu_Freud.pdf )

The vulture is an ancient symbol of madre.Inoltre was widely believed in the ancient world that there are vultures that males and females reproduce thanks to the wind. With the fantasy of the vulture Leonardo recalled not only the mother's womb, but also the condition of children without a father, raised only by the mother.
The intensity of the vulture in the fantasy suggests a very close bond between mother and figlio.Questo erotic relationship with his mother in early childhood has affected the sexuality of Leonardo depriving of virility and become indifferent to sex, but he also pushed to reach the summit of his art .
The drapery that covers the legs of the Virgin, Blue,
draws what seems to be the outline a vulture, with his head resting on the side of the Virgin, the wing down the leg and the tail that touches the baby's mouth. Hidden among the forms of painting, the vulture-mother continues to perform the act of that old fantasy of Leonardo.

Unfortunately for Freud, the word "vulture" was due to an oversight of the German translator who had translated as a kite "Geier (vulture).
The discovery disappointed Freud, who considered his essay on Leonardo, "the only good thing I've ever written."

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