Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)

© the copyright holders. Image credit: Martin Henderson / Art UK

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An over life-sized bust of Carl Jung (1875–1961) Swiss psychologist and philosopher. From 1907–1912 he was closely associated with Sigmund Freud, but later moved away from Freud's mechanistic psychological model, towards one which gave the individual a more purposeful place in the universe. Jung developed the theory of the collective unconscious. Behaviour is further modified by the individual's aims and aspirations, his or her striving towards individuation. Jung, who never visited Liverpool, once had a dream about the city saying 'I found myself in a dirty, sooty city. It was night, and winter, and dark, and raining. I was in Liverpool.' He climbed up some cliffs and discovered a plateau where streets converged – which Bootle poet Peter O’Halligan decided in the 1970s must have been on Mathew Street.

Title

Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) (Pool of Life)

Date

1987

Medium

bronze (original) & plaster painted bronze (replacement)

Accession number

L2_MH_S247

Acquisition method

commissioned by Robert Burns, Manager of Flanagan's Apple

Work type

Bust

Owner

Robert Burns, Manager of 'Flanagan's Apple'

Custodian

Robert Burns, Manager of 'Flanagan's Apple'

Work status

extant

Unveiling date

18th December 1987 / July 1993

Access

at all times

Inscription description

plaque: Liverpool / is the / pool of Life / C.G. Jung, 1927

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Located at

Mathew Street, Merseyside

L2 6RE

Located in a niche, to the right, outside the entrance to 'Flanagan’s Apple' Irish bar, 18 Mathew Street.