Freud 16. Creation of Adam. 2012. oil on canvas. 24″ x 24″
April 5 – 20, 2012
Opening: Thursday, April 5, 6 – 9 p.m.
Artist’s Talk: Sunday, April 15, 1 – 3 p.m.
BEZPALA BROWN GALLERY
17 Church Street (Front and Church)
Toronto, ON, M5E 1M2
T: 416.907.6875
E: info@bezpalabrown.com
www.bezpalabrown.com
Hours: Mon by appointment, Tues–Wed 11:00–6:00 p.m., Thurs–Sat 11:00–8.00 p.m., Sun 11:00–6:00 p.m.
Dr. Sigmund Freud dreamed of building a very special device to explore people’s dreams. He even had a name for it—”Freudoscope.” Colleagues and friends didn’t take it seriously. They joked derisively. Dr. Freud seemed not to be offended, or he just pretended not to take the jokes seriously. He just smiled mysteriously, as he thought: “Well, go ahead—laugh, we’ll see if am I right or I am wrong, I know what I’m doing.”
But no one knew that he actually had built such a machine…
This project is called FREUDOSCOPE; Unknown Facts and Speculations about the Life and Death of Famous Dr. F. Dr. Freud was one of the first pop-stars of the twentieth century. His behavior in public, his attitude, his attention to his own appearance, as well as his not appearing at any Psychoanalytics conference or congress, leads one to conclude that he was a successful professional self-promoter rather than a modest scientist. His influence on the evolution of psychology in the twentieth century is more an object for anthropologists and philosophers of science. But, as a visual artist, I couldn’t just pass by such an intriguing topic. So, here you go, I present to you my interpretation of Freud through the FREUDOSCOPE.
Oleg Lipchenko
About Oleg Lipchenko
Oleg Lipchenko, artist and illustrator. Oleg works on oil paintings and graphic art. His style can be described as symbolic, surrealistic, and plastically sophisticated, with the emphasis on expressiveness. He has had a number of solo and group exhibitions. His illustrator’s experience includes children’s books, book covers and scientific illustrations.
Oleg works in traditional media including oil on canvas, watercolour, pencil and ink. He uses print graphics such as xylography, linoprint and l’eauforte and digital enhancement (for technical purposes such as scanning, color adjustment, etc.). In 2009, Oleg Lipchenko won the Elizabeth Mrazik-Cleaver Award from IBBY for his illustrations in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (Tundra Books, 2009). His Humpty Dumpty and Friends (Tundra Books, 2009) was nominated for the 2010 Book of the Year Awards by ForeWord Reviews. Recently Oleg has completed illustrations to the Hunting of the Snark by Lewis Carroll and illustrations for this Freudoscope exhibition.
Oleg studied art and architecture in Art School and at the University in Poltava, Ukraine. He worked as an architect for several years, and as a teacher of drawing, painting and composition in the Art School. Oleg relocated to Canada in 1999. He lives in Toronto with his family and has embraced the Ontario way of life.