| Anatomically
Correct: Medical Illustrations, 1543–2008
On
exhibition March 17 - May 10
The William Benton Museum of Art
The State Art Museum
University of Connecticut
245 Glenbrook Road
Storrs, CT 06269
860.486.4520
http://www.thebenton.org
Reception Friday, March 20,
5-7:30 pm
The Benton’s contribution to
the University-wide “Year of Science 2009” celebration is an
exhibition that chronicles the history of medical illustration
through a selection of prints, drawings, computer graphics and
animation from the 16th century to the present. Each piece
articulates a unique union of art, anatomy and medicine, the works
together reflecting the ways that union has evolved over the
centuries and continues to thrive in an era of digital photography
and 3-D imaging.
The works in Anatomically
Correct come out of a pictorial tradition that was set in
motion by the Belgian anatomist Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564). He
conducted his dissections firsthand, breaking away from the
longstanding authority of classical texts by relying on direct
observation. He similarly reformed scientific illustration by
insisting upon anatomical accuracy and precision for the plates in
his pivotal work, De Humani Corporis Fabrica (On the Fabric of
the Human Body) of 1543. These illustrations by the artist
John Van Calcar divided the field of scientific illustration into
“pre-Vesalian” and “post-Vesalian” periods. With
Vesalius’s brilliant integration of image and text, illustration
began to serve a crucial function in the communication of
scientific information, initiating the role of scientific
illustration as a record of the progress of science in general.
Along with Vesalius’s
contributions, Anatomically Correct highlights
significant post-Vesalian developments that carried his vision
into the present. Illustrations from William Hunter’s The
Anatomy of the Human Gravid Uterus (1774) played a vital role in
establishing obstetrics as a field of medicine rather than a
practice of midwives. A major advancement in print technology is
represented by color lithography in Jean Marc Bourgery’s Atlas
of Anatomy (1831–1854). A shift in the role of illustration
from works of art in themselves to didactic tools can be seen in
Henry Gray’s Anatomy: Descriptive and Surgical (1858),
and the increased role of the computer in contemporary
illustration is evidenced in the 3-D animation of the
Connecticut-based XVIVO studio.
In a discipline we associate with
objectivity and empiricism, the works in the exhibition
consistently reveal themselves to be products of their respective
social climates. Ideological and social conventions inevitably
come through in the illustrations as anatomists and artist catered
to their audience’s desire to see the body represented morally,
socially, theologically.
Anatomically Correct
commemorates the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s birth.
The exhibition is particularly relevant to this moment of
celebration as a reflection on the advancement in the field of
anatomy as a basis for the theory of evolution and as an
acknowledgement of the role of art as critical to the way these
advancements were visualized.
Exhibition curated by Eve Perry,
M.A. candidate, Art History, 2009 |