Thursday, 11 January 2018

Incubus













Michel Nedjar




Made to instruction by Rose Finn-Kelcey











Detail by Henry Fuseli





This painting has yielded many interpretations and is seen as prefiguring late nineteenth-century psychoanalytic theories regarding dreams and the unconscious (Sigmund Freud allegedly kept a reproduction of the painting on the wall of his apartment in Vienna).
The figure that sits upon the woman’s chest is often described as an imp or an incubus, a type of spirit said to lie atop people in their sleep or even to have sexual intercourse with sleeping women. Fuseli’s painting is suggestive but not explicit, leaving open the possibility that the woman is simply dreaming.

Dream Catcher

In this work I have made several little figures with enlarged  faces, painted in the horror mask tradition, the incubuses are held in side a net, a "Body Bag"  Other decapitated heads pile up at the bottom of the bag.