The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology was established in New York in 1962 to make analytical psychology available beyond the formal training context. From its building at 28 East 39th Street in Manhattan it runs public lectures and seminars, hosts the Kristine Mann Library and the New York repository of the ARAS image archive, and publishes Quadrant, the foundation's journal. It operates alongside but separately from the C.G. Jung Institute of New York, which trains analysts.

Focus areas

Programs

  • Public lectures and seminars
  • Training programs in analytical psychology
  • Quadrant journal
  • Kristine Mann Library and ARAS New York repository

Depth orientation

The New York Foundation is the longest-running public-education arm of Jungian work in the United States, with a sixty-year record of bringing analytical psychology to a non-clinical audience while also stewarding two of the field's primary research collections.

C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology's role Comparable organizations