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Fine Arts "Memoirs of My Nervous Illness", Original Artwork by Friese Undine From the Schreberismus Series
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"Memoirs of My Nervous Illness", Original Artwork by Friese Undine From the Schreberismus Series

from $910.00

This an original artwork by Brooklyn-based artist Friese Undine from his SCHREBERISMUS series.

The piece measures 16 1/4 inches by 14 1/4 inches framed and consists of ink and enamel on aluminum. Select framed or unframed from the options below.

About the series: Daniel Paul Schreber was a German judge who, after suffering a nervous breakdown in 1883, was institutionalized at the Psychiatric hospital of Leipzig University. In 1894 the director of the hospital, Paul Flechsig transferred Schreber to Sonnenstein Castle near Dresden.

In his book titled Memoirs of my Nervous Illness, published in 1903, Schreber tells the reader that he had become the last living human on earth and all of the human forms around him were reanimated corpses, or “fleeting improvised men”. It was his mission to repopulate the earth. He would do this concentrating his mental energy on his body, making his breasts expand and hips broaden thereby seducing God who would inseminate him. Schreber would then give birth to a new race of beings.

Also, befitting the Biblical scope of his mission and his role as a prophet he must become Jewish. This and many other miracles took place around him, in every part of his body and in distant reaches of the universe. These drawings are based on some of the miracles Schreber describes.

The quotes accompanying the drawings are from the 1988 edition of the Memoirs from Harvard University Press.

Friese Undine (1965, Los Angeles) is a Brooklyn-based artist interested in psychology, primatology, human evolution, history, politics, cannibalism, and cabinets of curiosity.

Please note: Shipping fee includes packaging and handling costs

Framing options:
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Add To Cart

This an original artwork by Brooklyn-based artist Friese Undine from his SCHREBERISMUS series.

The piece measures 16 1/4 inches by 14 1/4 inches framed and consists of ink and enamel on aluminum. Select framed or unframed from the options below.

About the series: Daniel Paul Schreber was a German judge who, after suffering a nervous breakdown in 1883, was institutionalized at the Psychiatric hospital of Leipzig University. In 1894 the director of the hospital, Paul Flechsig transferred Schreber to Sonnenstein Castle near Dresden.

In his book titled Memoirs of my Nervous Illness, published in 1903, Schreber tells the reader that he had become the last living human on earth and all of the human forms around him were reanimated corpses, or “fleeting improvised men”. It was his mission to repopulate the earth. He would do this concentrating his mental energy on his body, making his breasts expand and hips broaden thereby seducing God who would inseminate him. Schreber would then give birth to a new race of beings.

Also, befitting the Biblical scope of his mission and his role as a prophet he must become Jewish. This and many other miracles took place around him, in every part of his body and in distant reaches of the universe. These drawings are based on some of the miracles Schreber describes.

The quotes accompanying the drawings are from the 1988 edition of the Memoirs from Harvard University Press.

Friese Undine (1965, Los Angeles) is a Brooklyn-based artist interested in psychology, primatology, human evolution, history, politics, cannibalism, and cabinets of curiosity.

Please note: Shipping fee includes packaging and handling costs

This an original artwork by Brooklyn-based artist Friese Undine from his SCHREBERISMUS series.

The piece measures 16 1/4 inches by 14 1/4 inches framed and consists of ink and enamel on aluminum. Select framed or unframed from the options below.

About the series: Daniel Paul Schreber was a German judge who, after suffering a nervous breakdown in 1883, was institutionalized at the Psychiatric hospital of Leipzig University. In 1894 the director of the hospital, Paul Flechsig transferred Schreber to Sonnenstein Castle near Dresden.

In his book titled Memoirs of my Nervous Illness, published in 1903, Schreber tells the reader that he had become the last living human on earth and all of the human forms around him were reanimated corpses, or “fleeting improvised men”. It was his mission to repopulate the earth. He would do this concentrating his mental energy on his body, making his breasts expand and hips broaden thereby seducing God who would inseminate him. Schreber would then give birth to a new race of beings.

Also, befitting the Biblical scope of his mission and his role as a prophet he must become Jewish. This and many other miracles took place around him, in every part of his body and in distant reaches of the universe. These drawings are based on some of the miracles Schreber describes.

The quotes accompanying the drawings are from the 1988 edition of the Memoirs from Harvard University Press.

Friese Undine (1965, Los Angeles) is a Brooklyn-based artist interested in psychology, primatology, human evolution, history, politics, cannibalism, and cabinets of curiosity.

Please note: Shipping fee includes packaging and handling costs

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