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Image Not Available for Necessity 8 (Schreber)
Necessity 8 (Schreber)
Image Not Available for Necessity 8 (Schreber)

Necessity 8 (Schreber)

Peter Sacks (South African, born in 1950, active in France and United States)
2007–09
Medium/TechniqueMixed media
Dimensions76 3/4 x 153 1/2 inches total
Credit LineMuseum purchase with funds donated by Timothy Phillips
Accession number2010.377
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsPaintings
Collections
Description
Through his paintings, Sacks—a highly accomplished poet—describes the “liminal figures stranded at the threshold of visibility.” In Necessity 8, he types on fabric fragments texts by Daniel Paul Schreber, whose Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (1903) recorded Schreber’s fear of his own self vanishing, of being replaced. Documenting his divine revelations and delusional world while he was committed to a psychiatric hospital, his words quickly became iconic for students of psychology, fascinating Sigmund Freud, among others. Here, Sacks realizes the words as a portrait of searching for the self in the face of despair or disappearance—and celebrating presence.
ProvenanceThe artist, with Paul Rodgers Gallery: New York, NY; sold to museum June 2010 (Accession date: June 16, 2010)
Premonitions
Leo Manso
1963
Untitled
Anselm Kiefer
1984
Untitled
Emmett McDermott
1991
Gathering
Ambera Wellmann
2021
Greasy Grass Premonition #2
David Paul Bradley
1995
Backward C
Mark Bradford
2005
Guernica to Wounded Knee
Stan Natchez
2012
9 Huitres
Miquel Barcelo
1986
Tribal Map
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith
2000