An Exploration of Antoine Watteau’s Fête Galante in a Wooded Landscape

The Society of Analytical Psychology presents
An Exploration of Antoine Watteau’s Fête Galante in a Wooded Landscape
Location: The Wallace Collection Manchester Square W1U 3BN London
Date: 7 November 2015
15:00 to 16:30

(c) The Wallace Collection; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation
(c) The Wallace Collection; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

©Trustees of the Wallace Collection
About the painting
Antoine Watteau’s Fête Galante in a Wooded Landscape, c. 1719-21
can be found on the Ground Floor of the Wallace Collection in the Billiard Room (painting ref P391).
This painting is a major example of Watteau’s Fêtes Galantes, seemingly harmless idealised depictions of outdoor gatherings, a genre seen by contemporaries as a Utopian image of love and sociability, depicting an unattainable ideal. The relationships between the protagonists are intentionally left open, identifiable couples are avoided, sexual desire is latently present and ironically commented on. The work was painted without a commission for an open market leaving a larger role to the artist’s own personality. Nothing is known from contemporary sources about Watteau’s love life, except his extreme shyness.
Dr Vogtherr and Prof Schaverien will introduce Antoine Watteau and describe its significance for culture and emotional development. They will use this particular painting, which will be projected in the auditorium, as a springboard for discussion; audience questions, responses and ideas are welcomed to help navigate the challenges of the work.
Attendees are free to go and view the painting on the Gallery wall either before or after the talk.
There is no expectation of previous study or work with the painting, or in the academic tradition.
This session will be chaired and supported by Basil Lawrence
SAP Public Programme Jung & Art Series Convenor: Jay Barlow
External Co-Convenor: Basil Lawrence

Tickets : £10
For booking and more information: http://www.thesap.org.uk/calendar/375/220-An-Exploration-of-Antoine-Watteau-s-F-te-Galante-in-a-Wooded-Landscape

Salons coming October, November and in 2016…

The following Salons are now open for registration– contact us if you have any questions…

beach“Even his griefs are a joy long after to one that remembers all that he wrought and endured.”
― Homer, The Odyssey

 

 

 

“Every reader, as he reads, is actually the reader of himself. The writer’s work is only a kind of optical instrument he provides the reader so he can discern what he might never have seen in himself without this book. The reader’s recognition in himself of what the book says is the proof of the book’s truth.”
― Marcel Proust, Time Regained

  • Absalom, Absalom! Starting November 3rd; 12:30- 2:30 Tuesdays (Evening option Tuesdays available if there is interest) Kentish Town

“I was wrong. I admit it. I believed that there were things which still mattered just because they had mattered once. But I was wrong. Nothing matters but breath, breathing, to know and to be alive.”
― William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom!

  • Ulysses 2016 by James Joyce  Starting 12th/13th January; afternoon and evening meetings available

** If you are planning on doing this study, consider the Odyssey study which would be wonderful preparation**

Coming Salons — a new Proust study, Homer & more Faulkner?

IN the midst of Faulkner’s Sound and the Fury, Proust’s Sodom and Gomorrah and a study of The Odyssey– all these rich works result in a bit of mental cacophony…but then a Salonist offers a clarifying statement as this in reflection to this week in Faulkner: “I don’t recall what we concluded about time and death, but life is too short to worry about it…” In another Sound & Fury conversation, we connected the act of Cronus’ castration of his father to the fantasy Quentin has as an option out of his suicide– and mused on the struggle to castrate Time itself.

We do manage to go down deep in all of these works, thinking and discussing how to understand the self and human relationships in the loud world, how to find integrity in a world of monsters and angry gods, what does love look like in a society that has created an art of subversion and manipulation?
Woman-Splitting-Head

Coming  Salon studies are in response to reader requests– but we are always open to other possibilities.  I am researching a series on literature of transgression including Celine, Nabokov, Wilde, Genet….and am hoping to continue our Faulkner work with Absalom, Absalom!   I am still hoping to schedule a Salon Intensive on Hamlet; and have had a few requests for a Midnight’s Children study–stay posted as I continue my own battle with time.  Please let me know which studies are of interest to you and what works well for you in terms of schedule (afternoon vs evening).

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