Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Schizofreudia - Jan Theuninck, 1999





Schizophrenia and freudian drives in a power system:

Nonconformity and Freethinking Now Considered Mental Illnesses - See more at:


La non-conformité et la libre-pensée: considérées comme maladies mentales - See more at:

https://arnolfini-mma.blogspot.com/2022/12/no61-jan-theuninck-b.html
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"Schizofreudia": Interpretation and ContextThe term "Schizofreudia" seems likely to be a neologism or portmanteau coined by Theuninck himself—a deliberate fusion of "schizo-" (evoking schizophrenia, symbolizing fractured perception or societal delusion) and "Freud" or "Freudia" (referencing Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, perhaps twisted into a playful or ironic "Freudian" lens on madness). This aligns with Theuninck's penchant for provocative, multilingual wordplay in his titles and writings, where he often merges psychological concepts with political critique.Schizofreudia is an evolving concept from his ongoing explorations of mental fragmentation in modern society. Theuninck's work frequently interrogates Freudian ideas—repression, the unconscious, and the psyche's role in authoritarianism—through an abstract, disorienting aesthetic. For instance:
  • His paintings like Zersetzung (2014, referencing the Stasi's psychological decomposition tactics) and Zyklon B (2013, alluding to Holocaust gas chambers) use stark, eroded monochromes to evoke mental disintegration.
  • Essays on his Academia.edu page, such as "De dichter en de politiek" (The Poet and Politics), critique democracy's slide into surveillance states, echoing Freud's Civilization and Its Discontents but amplified by contemporary fears of "neostasi" (neo-Stasi) control.
In this light, "Schizofreudia" could encapsulate Theuninck's hypothetical or thematic critique: a "schizophrenic Freudianism," where Freud's structured psychoanalysis crumbles under the weight of postmodern paranoia, totalitarianism, and lost reality. It might satirize how societies project collective delusions (e.g., New World Order conspiracies in works like Dein Kampf, 2019) onto individuals, blurring personal psychosis with systemic madness.Thematic Analysis of Theuninck's Work in Relation to "Schizofreudia"Theuninck's oeuvre is a sustained meditation on the psyche's fragility amid historical trauma and modern authoritarianism. Here's a breakdown of key elements, tying into the potential "Schizofreudia" motif:1. Psychological Fragmentation and Freudian Echoes
  • Theuninck's abstracts often mimic the visual chaos of schizophrenia: layered, dissolving forms that suggest repressed memories surfacing violently. Paintings like Micropyle (2014) use porous, invasive textures, evoking Freud's idea of the id breaching the ego—micro-intrusions symbolizing surveillance or inner poison.
  • In writings, he draws on Hannah Arendt's warnings about totalitarianism's isolation tactics, paralleling Freud's death drive (Thanatos). A 2020s essay excerpt laments how "technology of the 'safe city'" installs mics and cameras, severing human contact and inducing collective "schizo" detachment. "Schizofreudia" might extend this to Freud's couch: therapy as a micro-totalitarianism, where confession becomes control.
2. Political Dimensions: Madness as Societal Symptom
  • Themes of Nazism, Stasi tactics, and "communitarianism" recur, as in Dein Kampf (a pun on Mein Kampf, critiquing modern "New World Order" ideologies). Theuninck positions art as resistance—"embarrassing banalities" against "thought bans"—mirroring Freud's taboo-breaking but radicalized for the digital age.
  • If "Schizofreudia" is a project, it could analyze how Freudian individualism fails in hyper-connected dystopias, where delusions (personal or shared) fuel conformity. 
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Jan Theuninck: An OverviewJan Theuninck (born June 7, 1954, in Zonnebeke, Belgium) is a multifaceted Belgian artist and writer, primarily known as a painter working in abstract styles that blend minimalism with monochrome expressionism. A native Dutch speaker, he predominantly writes poetry and essays in French, with occasional forays into English. His work often grapples with heavy historical, political, and psychological themes, including totalitarianism, surveillance, and the erosion of individual freedom. Theuninck's output spans visual art—acrylic paintings on canvas—and literary pieces, frequently self-published or disseminated through independent platforms like Academia.edu. His X (formerly Twitter) profile (
@JanTheuninck
) describes him as a "Belgian painter and author of embarrassing banalities," with a bio emphasizing themes like "Für die Freiheit und gegen Denkverbote!" (For freedom and against thought bans!) and "à la recherche de la vérité perdue" (in search of the lost truth). 
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Schizofreudia sculpture (1976) - scale model 




Fortuna Holland - Jan Theuninck, 2002



La fin de l'époque des rêves imposés en toute liberté  ?



Papirac
the real post-war power
is still the one of the Uebermenschen
and this "democracy" can’t be realized
but on the back of the Untermenschen...
© by Jan Theuninck


White Niggers - Jan Theuninck, 2000



After the black niggers of Leopold II, the white niggers of Albert II  
 ----  I am a white nigger !  ----

Since decades they use chemical weapons to make you will-less,
 without any resistance to enslave you
(this is NOT against Belgium or the King, it's about me)


That man can be a slave even without being put in chains is of crucial importance in our situation today - Erich Fromm
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la culture de l'impuissance - by Jan Theuninck, 2011




anno 2022 : 
https://mailartfossiant.blogspot.com/2022/03/mail-art-project-2022-il-pianeta-degli_26.html

Pantospherose - Jan Theuninck, 2002