{"id":1972680,"date":"2026-06-03T09:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-06-03T06:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1972680"},"modified":"2026-06-03T09:00:00","modified_gmt":"2026-06-03T06:00:00","slug":"olga-frobe-kapteyn-painter-collector-carl-jung-collaborator","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1972680","title":{"rendered":"Olga Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn: Painter, Collector &amp; Carl Jung Collaborator"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[analyse_image type=&#8221;featured&#8221; src=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/WEB-Olga.jpg?w=1024&#8243;]<\/p>\n<div class=\"a-content a-content--offset lrv-a-floated-parent lrv-u-font-family-body lrv-u-line-height-normal lrv-u-font-size-18 lrv-u-position-relative\">\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\t\u201cThe deepest things in human life \u2026 can only be expressed inimages,\u201d wrote Olga Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn. And yet, though obsessed with images, she never called herself an \u201cartist,\u201d even as she painted and drew. Fundamentally, she was a collector: of people, of images, of ideas, always animated by her interest in symbols and archetypes. Carl Jung, her close friend and collaborator, fueled this long, epic inquiry. Still, she remains profoundly mysterious and contradictory, a person fiercely drawn to and driven by spirituality who left few windows into her own spirit.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tBorn in London to Dutch parents in 1881, Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn was the highly educated daughter of highly educated parents. At once spiritual and analytical, she had no specific belief system. Like many Europeans who became interested in alternative or occult traditions in the early 20th century, she was drawn to and influenced by innumerable schools of spirituality, philosophy, and mythology. This paradox sits at the heart of Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s philosophy: the importance, and challenge, of connecting the personal with the eternal. She was driven by the desire to connect all human experience with a set of universal truths and constants, a goal that could both equalize and erase.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAfter her family moved to Switzerland, Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn learned tailoring, embroidery, and jewelry-making at Zurich\u2019s School of Applied Arts, then went on to study art history at the University of Zurich. In 1909, she married a musician, Iwan Hermann Fr\u00f6be; they moved to Berlin, where she encountered a series of tragedies. In 1915, she gave birth to twin daughters, one of whom was severely disabled. Then just months later, Iwan died in a plane crash. The disabled child lived in an institution in Germany until she went missing after Hitler\u2019s rise to power. Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn never saw her again, nor knew what had happened to her, but it was understood that she had been taken and murdered as part of the Nazi project to \u201ccleanse the race.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThere is no trace of Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn ever mentioning this horrific event in her letters, nor anywhere else. \u201cFor her, being a mother is something different than taking care of your children,\u201d Frederika Tevebring, a research fellow at King\u2019s College London, told me. The idea of the \u201cGreat Mother\u201d or the archetype of the prehistoric goddess figure fascinated Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn. It was a major part of her collection of images of archetypes, which she sourced from libraries and archives around Europe and North America. But her own relationship with her children, alive or dead, was never a priority\u2014to a degree that is difficult to imagine. Instead, she put her energy into art, both making it and collecting it.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\t\u201cShe suffered unspeakable traumas in her life and she never underwent analysis,\u201d says Riccardo Bernardini, her biographer and the current scientific secretary of the Eranos Foundation, which was started by Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn in 1933. \u201cShe was able to survive all of this thanks to her graphic practice,\u201d he adds, comparing it to a form of art therapy. What survives of that practice today are series of screenprints she called \u201cmeditation drawings,\u201d as well as dozens of sketches she described as \u201cvisions.\u201d \u201cMy feeling is the technique and the time she dedicated to it were even more important than the symbols,\u201d Bernardini told me. She drew under the guidance of her unconscious, striving to work free of intention.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tLike many early abstract artists, such as the Swedish painter Hilma af Klint, Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn did not consider her work \u201cart,\u201d but rather something touched by a higher power. Her works were made entirely in primary colors, plus black and gold. Their harsh geometric forms are sometimes punctuated by recognizable symbols like crosses and hearts, while others are made entirely of abstract twisting, circular, and diagonal forms. Her works were meant to be irrational\u2014unlike the archetypes she collected, which had specific, if complex, meanings. The drawings and prints she made were not intended to be decoded. They existed outside language, in a world she thought of as her unconscious as she strove to work free of intention; other artists working in similar ways, like Klint, might call it the spirit world. \u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>THOUGH HER PRINTS <\/strong>have recently come into view at auction and inmuseum collections\u2014the Art Institute of Chicago and the Metropolitan Museum both recently acquired sets of screenprints of her meditation drawings\u2014Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn is best known as the founder of Eranos, the annual conference and research foundation. Based in her home, Casa Gabriella, in Ascona-Moscia, Switzerland, Eranos sought to be a \u201cfree space for the spirit,\u201d where ideas from East and West could meet. Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s vision was deeply of its time. Born of a desire for global connection and inner peace, it was as much a project of looking backward as forward. Although it claimed to have a global outlook, the perspectives it fostered on the \u201cEast\u201d were very much situated in the \u201cWest.\u201d Eranos has continued for nearly 100 years.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tJung attended the first Eranos conference and those that followed, building a wide network enabled by the leadership of Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn. His concept of the collective unconscious, a universal element of the human mind connecting past and present, was fundamental to her understanding of images and the interconnected nature of ancient archetypes. The women who flocked to Jung are sometimes grouped together condescendingly as <em>Jungfrauen<\/em> (Jung women), and in some ways Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn might fall into this category of groupies. But in other ways she is much more idiosyncratic. Her inexplicable refusal to ever participate in analysis despite her admiration of Jung sets her apart, as does her independent leadership of Eranos.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tFr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s collecting project, though, began under Jung\u2019s directive to accumulate an archive of images of archetypes that became the iconographic basis for his book <em>Psychology and Alchemy<\/em>,as well as the works of other scholars: Mircea Eliade\u2019s <em>The Forge and the Crucible<\/em>,Erich Neumann\u2019s <em>The Great Mother: An Analysis of the Archetype. <\/em>The collection eventually became Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s own beast, however. Jung stopped financially supporting the project, and Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn found her own backers in American financiers and art collectors Mary and Paul Mellon. She continued to amass her own extensive archive, which she donated to London\u2019s Warburg Institute in 1946. As an institution concerned with creating its own idiosyncratic archive of images and knowledge, and one that shared Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s German roots, the Warburg was a fitting home. \u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>AFTER JUNG\u2019S NEED <\/strong>for the project concluded, Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyncontinuedit herself: By looking backward across human history, she hoped to find clues to aid her in looking forward. She also sought to create a tool with which individuals could decipher their dreams by finding and decoding the archetypes in them. Despite her background, her understanding of images was not really an art historical one, although psychoanalytical methodologies of studying the history of art were emerging. Instead, it is one that does not see images as \u201cart\u201d but as something more fundamental, a method of communication or thought that is too primal to be given that name.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThis put Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn in dialogue with a wider movement in early 20th-century Europe to turn back toward the prehistoric era, a time before written language\u2014which was only just being recognized as an era when humans had complex societies and civilizations. The centrality of images to intuitive, subconscious methods of understanding came to be seen as particularly feminine. Images of ancient and prehistoric feminine figures, like those Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn collected, were equally at home in ecofeminist movements as they were in the ethos of fascism. Both proffered a desire for a return to simpler times, to purity, to nature: These fantasies can all skew toward exclusionary extremism on the left and the right.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tFor Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn, the fantasy led her to a fiercely complacent apoliticism in the face of the defining conflict of the postmodern era. This was, of course, still political. As with her adopted country of Switzerland, neutrality was not an escape from the implications of the war. In refusing to speak out against Hitler\u2019s horrors, she acquiesced to them, as did Jung and many of his followers. Jung has been widely understood as representing the Aryanization of psychoanalysis, in contrast with its founder, Sigmund Freud, a Jew who was forced to flee his native Vienna for London after the Anschluss in 1938.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tFor most of her life, Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn lived alone in her house on the shores of Lake Maggiore in Switzerland. Bernardini lives there today, and he wondered to me how she endured all those harsh, bleak winters by herself. \u201cIt is incredibly isolated,\u201d he says. During the war, when she was consumed by her search for archetypal images, she found herself unable to sleep. She wrote to Jung asking for his guidance, and he advised that her reaction was quite normal for someone living in a home so filled with pictures that she nicknamed it the \u201cHouse of Images.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tYet Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s belief in the immense potency of images is overwhelming and purposefully illogical\u2014her goal was to find a \u201crespite from logical thinking,\u201d after all. She believed that she would find truth and solace by turning away from the present and toward the past. She articulated it as turning inward, but she wasn\u2019t really: She was looking outward, just not at what was right in front of her. But in her desperation to better understand the world, she ended up overlooking it entirely.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tDespite her solitary lifestyle, her life\u2019s work was a practice of bringing people together at conferences; it\u2019s just one of her many paradoxes. During the war, she wrote to Jung that Eranos was the only place intelligent Europeans could meet outside of \u201cpolitical misunderstandings and tensions\u201d\u2014a remarkably understated way of describing a century-defining war, as Tevebring has noted. Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s apoliticism did enable her work to continue through a global conflict, but it collides disturbingly with Nazism\u2019s consequences for her daughter\u2014not to mention the consequences for millions of Jews and other targets of the Holocaust, including many members of Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s prized \u201cintelligentsia.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tFr\u00f6be-Kapteyn\u2019s friend, the philosopher Alfons Rosenberg, described her paintings as having a \u201cfrightening coldness.\u201d Indeed, with their sharp-edged shapes, inscrutable forms, and unnatural colors, they do somehow inspire terror, or at least a feeling of instability, which also infuses her legacy. Her belief in a universal truth was not unique, but her pursuit of it was relentless and oddly self-erasing. In focusing on connection rather than difference, Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn purposefully flattened her worldview: Cultures, belief systems, politics, historical periods all became manifestations of \u201cprimeval ideas.\u201d Inside all those ideas, where is Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn? \u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>[analyse_source url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/art-in-america\/features\/olga-frobe-kapteyn-aby-warburg-carl-jung-1234787853\/&#8221;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[analyse_image type=&#8221;featured&#8221; src=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/WEB-Olga.jpg?w=1024&#8243;] \u201cThe deepest things in human life \u2026 can only be expressed inimages,\u201d wrote Olga Fr\u00f6be-Kapteyn. And yet, though obsessed with images, she never called herself an \u201cartist,\u201d even as she painted and drew. Fundamentally, she was a collector: of people, of images, of ideas, always animated by her interest in symbols and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[61,226],"class_list":["post-1972680","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-politics","tag-artnews-com","tag-crawlmanager"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1972680","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1972680"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1972680\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1972680"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1972680"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1972680"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}