ABSTRACT

This book gathers the published and unpublished writings of Dr Grace Pailthorpe (1883-1971), English surgeon, specialist in psychological medicine and surrealist artist to provide an in-depth study of her work and legacy.

Pailthorpe’s theoretical understanding of the psyche informed her approach to art, setting her work apart from other Surrealist artists by unifying artistic, scientific and therapeutic aims. Pailthorpe considered Surrealism to be a method of investigation into unconscious mental life, and believed that it was essential that the repressed part of our minds should find expression. By bringing her artistic and theoretical work to light, Montanaro and Stefana reassert Pailthorpe’s significance to the histories of both psychoanalysis and Surrealism, rendering the cross-disciplinary relevance of her work accessible to a contemporary audience.

This book will prove to be a rich resource for scholars and students interested in psychoanalysis and art history, and provides an invaluable case study for the continuing significance of visual artistic practices to clinical work.

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|4 pages

The analysis of a poem 1

chapter Chapter 3|35 pages

The Birth Trauma Lecture (1938)

Lecture on drawings. Being an extract from a research now in its final stages 1

chapter Chapter 4|9 pages

The scientific aspect of Surrealism 1

chapter Chapter 7|7 pages

Lecture on Surrealism 1

chapter Chapter 8|5 pages

Surrealism and psychology 1

chapter Chapter 9|20 pages

Draft summary of psychorealism

The sluicegate of the emotions 1

chapter |5 pages

Afterword by Desy Safán-Gerard