Anzieu studied
philosophy and was a pupil of
Daniel Lagache, before undertaking his first
psychoanalysis with
Jacques Lacan. Then, after discovering that Lacan had also treated his mother ("
Aimée"), he began a second analysis with
Georges Favez. He retained a deep grudge against Lacan's lack of candor and later also condemned the excesses and arbitrary practices of the Lacanians — highlighting the latter's 'unending dependence on an idol, a logic, or a language', as well as the pervasively tantalizing element in Lacan's approach, with 'fundamental truths to be revealed...but always at some further point'. Among Anzieu's many significant contributions to psychoanalysis were his work on Freud's self-analysis and his extensive study of groups, relying in particular on the work of
Wilfred Ruprecht Bion. Building on the writings of such psychoanalysts as
Melanie Klein and
Heinz Kohut, Anzieu also sought with great skill to analyze, not so much works of art, but the creative process itself; and he published numerous works on literary creation (
Pascal,
Beckett) and artistic creation (
Bacon)'. Perhaps the most telling strand in his writings, however, was that of the so-called Skin-Ego, and the related concept of the "Psychic Envelope". ==On Freud's "self-analysis"==