Historians are acutely aware of the role of art in medicine. Elaborate early modern works catch our eye; technical innovations attract analysis. This paper beats a different path by examining three little-known artists in early twentieth-century Britain who deployed what may seem like an outdated method: drawing. Locating the function of pencil and ink illustrations across a range of sites, we take a journey from the exterior of the living patient via invasive surgical operations to the bodily interior. We see the enduring importance of delineation against a backdrop of the mechanization of conflict and of imaging
Medicine in England came into its own in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, melding the rich tr...
In "The Doctor's Dilemma," Bernard Shaw suggests that there is more antagonism than attraction betwe...
In "The Doctor's Dilemma," Bernard Shaw suggests that there is more antagonism than attraction betwe...
Historians are acutely aware of the role of art in medicine. Elaborate early modern works catch our ...
Historians are acutely aware of the role of art in medicine. Elaborate early modern works catch our ...
The objective of this thesis is to show that a study of medical images produced by British artists i...
The article analyses paintings of wounded patients created by Scottish anatomist, neurologist, pract...
At the turn of the nineteenth century when anatomy and hands-on dissection became the prerequisite f...
At the turn of the nineteenth century when anatomy and hands-on dissection became the prerequisite f...
Artistic scientific research is, I believe, one of the ways out of the cul-de-sac that modern art br...
The purpose of this practice-based research has been to gain knowledge of the history of Western ana...
The thesis examines the practice of morbid anatomy as it was articulated and developed in late Georg...
This dissertation examines nineteenth-century American art and visual and material culture, interrog...
Little is known about the image of the Wound Man, a graphic drawing of a violently wounded figure re...
How medical educators taught anatomy in the past changed throughout the centuries, ranging from diss...
Medicine in England came into its own in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, melding the rich tr...
In "The Doctor's Dilemma," Bernard Shaw suggests that there is more antagonism than attraction betwe...
In "The Doctor's Dilemma," Bernard Shaw suggests that there is more antagonism than attraction betwe...
Historians are acutely aware of the role of art in medicine. Elaborate early modern works catch our ...
Historians are acutely aware of the role of art in medicine. Elaborate early modern works catch our ...
The objective of this thesis is to show that a study of medical images produced by British artists i...
The article analyses paintings of wounded patients created by Scottish anatomist, neurologist, pract...
At the turn of the nineteenth century when anatomy and hands-on dissection became the prerequisite f...
At the turn of the nineteenth century when anatomy and hands-on dissection became the prerequisite f...
Artistic scientific research is, I believe, one of the ways out of the cul-de-sac that modern art br...
The purpose of this practice-based research has been to gain knowledge of the history of Western ana...
The thesis examines the practice of morbid anatomy as it was articulated and developed in late Georg...
This dissertation examines nineteenth-century American art and visual and material culture, interrog...
Little is known about the image of the Wound Man, a graphic drawing of a violently wounded figure re...
How medical educators taught anatomy in the past changed throughout the centuries, ranging from diss...
Medicine in England came into its own in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, melding the rich tr...
In "The Doctor's Dilemma," Bernard Shaw suggests that there is more antagonism than attraction betwe...
In "The Doctor's Dilemma," Bernard Shaw suggests that there is more antagonism than attraction betwe...