Irony

The world’s largest collection of sixteenth-century anatomical prints, or ‘fugitive sheets’ has been digitized and is available online, thanks to the Wellcome Library.  There are nineteen prints with pop-up action allowing the reader to see different organ systems in the order of dissection.  In this male and female set you can see both still images and video of the flaps being lifted—brilliant!  (I do wish that more of the entries offered stills, since the video is cool but it’s hard to get a detailed view of the different layers.)

I’m in the process of looking through all these, but I’m especially intrigued by this one.  Can you guess who’s making an unauthorized celebrity cameo?  It’s Vesalius’s head on that body, copied from his full-page portrait in the Fabrica.  Right next to an organ (on the right) taken from the same book.  Vesalius spent a great deal of energy, even prior to publication, in trying to forestall the plagiarism of his work.  I doubt, though, that even he imagined his own head would end up on a perpetually-being-dissected body.  One has to wonder about the motives of the artist—an ironic joke at the great dissector’s expense?

Here’s the original portrait for comparison:

Memento Mori Part II

A few weeks ago I wrote about the evolution of anatomy illustrations, promising that the second part of the series would appear the following week.  If you’ve been waiting, I apologize, but I have a good excuse—Scientific American contacted me about doing a similar slideshow for their website, which has just gone live.  Very exciting!  There are ten images, a couple are based on my previous post, but most completely new: check it out.

Memento Mori Part I

Quid me mihi detrahis? Who is it that tears me from myself?     – Ovid, The Metamorphosis Book VI

I recently began an essay on the evolution of images in anatomy books between 1450 and 1800, and I thought I’d share some of my early research.  All the images I’ve used are from the National Library of Medicine, which has an excellent historical anatomy exhibit.  Clicking on the pictures below will take you to the appropriate section of the NLM website for more images, biographies, and bibliographies.  (And a word of warning, some might find the illustrations graphic, disturbing, or not safe for work.)  Part II will hopefully appear sometime next week.

Sources:

  • Books of the Body: Anatomical Ritual and Renaissance Learning by Andrea Carlino
  • The Body Emblazoned: Dissection and the Human Body in Renaissance Culture by Jonathan Sawday
  • The Art of Anatomy: Depicting the Body from the Renaissance to Today by Rifkin, Ackerman, and Folkenberg.

Although curiosity about the body has long been a feature of human culture, anatomical science stagnated during the Middle Ages, a time when the words of classical authorities were valued over discovery.  Rather than working from observation or experimentation, medieval scholars compiled, rewrote, and annotated older medical works, particularly those of Galen.  It wasn’t until the late Middle Ages and Renaissance that increasingly literate and intellectual segments of society, renewed interest in science and discovery, and advances in printing resulted in the production of new anatomical treatises that eclipsed the achievements of the past and led to the foundation of modern anatomy.  But these new volumes were not purely scientific or didactic.  Luxury texts intended for an erudite, upper-class audience beyond the medical profession, they mixed art, science, and religion to create dramatic meditations on the natures of flesh and soul and the meaning of the body’s short existence.

Fasciculus de medicina

The first printed anatomy book was published in Venice in 1492 by the Gregorio brothers.  A Latin translation of a work by a little known German physician named Johannes de Ketham, it was planted firmly in the medieval medical tradition.  The book, which included treatises on subjects such as bloodletting, urinoscopy, and dissection, became an important teaching text, but its sumptuous woodcuts were also geared toward an audience of wealthy intellectuals.  A major success, it was republished in 1493 with new illustrations showing contemporary medical scenes including a dissection, and it appeared in twelve editions within a decade.  Though produced by a workshop, the designs are good examples of the clean, classical style of Venetian Renaissance illustration.  Below is the traditional zodiac man as well as a dissection scene, which portrays an anatomy lesson as performed in the late Middle Ages.  The young lector reads from an anatomical text, most likely Galen, while the sector, an uneducated barber/surgeon, preforms the dissection, and the ostensor, a high ranking professor, translates the words of the lector and directs the sector.  At this time dissection was not an act of observation and discovery, but was a tightly controlled public ritual intended to reinforce the authority of classical medical texts.  The illustration indicates the importance of the text by the prominent placement of the lector relative to the other figures, including the higher ranking ostensor.

Isagogae breves

This book, published in 1522 and 1523 by the humanist physician Jacopo Berengario da Carpi, is credited as the first printed anatomy text based on direct observation of the body.  Berengario was deeply skeptical of traditional anatomical practice, saying that a good anatomist ‘does not believe anything in his discipline simply because of the spoken or written word: what is required here is sight and touch.’  Though the woodcuts are artistically and anatomically crude, part of their importance lies in their reflection of Italian Renaissance culture.  Berengario was an art collector, and many of the figures are based on rediscovered classical art, religious images, and important works by Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael.  Berengario recognized the importance of anatomical knowledge for artists, and he recommended his book for their use as well as that of medical students.  The half-flayed figure below is in the traditional pose of an Apollo with light rays.  Other illustrations represent the redemptive potential of dissection, which was believed to help atone for the sins of the criminals whose bodies were commonly used for this purpose.  Several images of partially draped female nudes indicate a tension between sexual modesty and the display of dissected reproductive organs.

De humani corporis fabrica

One of the most famous medical texts of all time, The Fabric of the Human Body (1543) by Andreas Vesalius, was the first truly modern anatomical book.  Vesalius was a Flemish surgeon of the University of Padua who had been trained in the Galenic tradition.  Based on his own experience with dissection he rejected Galen as the ultimate authority and argued that surgeons should make their own observations, and he corrected many Galenic mistakes, such as the multi-lobed liver, that had been passed from text to text through the Middle Ages.  Vesalius and his collaborators were also some of the first people to grasp the full potential of the printed book, using the title page, illustrations, initials, and chapter/paragraph subdivisions to create a harmonious and practical work.  Vesalius’s illustrations were most likely based on his own careful drawings, and he worked closely with the woodcut artist Jan Stefan van Kalkar, a member of Titian’s studio.  This partnership resulted in extremely accurate and detailed work, better than anything that proceeded it.  But these are not just sterile medical images—the cadavers display human emotions of sadness, despair, and mourning.  The skeleton below ponders mortality in a memento mori which would reappear throughout western culture, including in Shakespeare.  The second appears to pray, or to be bent in agony.  Throughout the book dead trees and barren landscapes, representing death, are contrasted with churches and the promise of eternal life.

De dissectione partium corporis humani

Charles Estienne, a member of the famous printing family of Paris, began work on this book during the 1530s, hoping it would replace the Isagogae breves of Berengario.  He had been a student in Paris at the same time as Vesalius, sharing the former’s interest in dissection and the belief that direct observation was more important than the words of authorities.  Unfortunately, while Estienne’s book contributed some new discoveries to the science of anatomy, it was plagued by legal issues regarding the artwork and was not published until two years after De humani corporis fabrica.  One of the interesting aspects of Estienne’s book is that it includes a number of woodcuts of nude women that were, according to Rifkin, originally intended as ‘genteel humanist erotica’, but were altered by partial dissection and the inclusion of anatomical information relating to reproductive anatomy.  Included are Bathsheba being spied upon by David (below), as well as the goddesses Venus, Antiope, and Proserpina.  A good example of the complex relationships between art, medicine, books, and sex during the early modern era.

Happy 4th of July!

Obviously I’m very busy mixing fireworks and alcohol this weekend, but I’ve somehow managed to squeeze in a links post.

— You’ve likely seen this already, but a bookseller in Georgia (represent!) discovered an amazing porn stash in hollowed out books.  Booksaga is definitely a new favorite, featuring great writing and really funny stories of life as a small town bookseller.  Thanks to William for the link.

— Bibliophile Bullpen went to the thrift store and found the coolest thing ever.  I want one.

I went to the thrift store a couple of weeks ago.  Found an awesome old Polaroid camera set for a couple of bucks.  Bummer.  Bought it anyway.

— It sounds like Jeremy had a great trip to Charlottesville!

— More amusing housecalls from Bookride.

— Hoefler & Frere-Jones present a 223-year old specimen sheet featuring the “smallest letter in the world” at 4 points.

— Instructables has a nice article on getting started with wood block printing.  Via Moleskinerie

— Be sure to check out the excellent multi-part Slate piece on the troublesome science of gender differences.  There’s an entire page on the supposed gap in verbal abilities between men and women.  Good stuff.

— Bill Gates gets his old textbook back.  Aww.  Via Book Patrol.

Teeth

Shakespeare Teeth

  • Image courtesy of the University of Michigan Dentistry Library

Having my wisdom teeth removed is a procedure I’ve been putting off for, well, years at this point. So when my jaw started aching this week I didn’t pick up the phone to make an appointment with the oral surgeon. I got online and looked up the history of dental books.

One of the first things I found was a great Flickr collection by rosefirerising from the University of Michigan Dentistry Library.   Tons of stuff, including books, journal articles, anatomical illustrations, cartoons, ephemera and antique dental instruments.  Some of my favorite pictures are in the set called “Dentistry – Women and Children First.”  The one above is fantastic; who knew teeth wore tiny boots. 

Brushing, U of Michigan dentistry Library

  • Image courtesy of the University of Michigan Dentistry Library

Additionally, the American and British Dental Associations have history websites that list major works on dentistry.  I’ve compiled some of the most interesting below.

 - Artzney Buchlein (Little Medicinal Book for all Kinds of Diseases and Infirmities of the Teeth,) the first book “devoted entirely to dentistry,” was published in Germany in 1530.  Image courtesy of the University of Michigan Dentistry Library.

Artzney Buchlein

 - Libellus de dentibus (A Little Treatise on the Teeth) by Bartholomew Eusttachius, was published in 1563.

Eustachio’s contributions to the development of dental science were substantial. In addition to the many conceptual advances concerning tooth development and function, based on anatomical dissections, he also presented more detailed plates of the musculature of the face, floor of the mouth and neck as well as detailed plates of the tongue and of the crown and roots of the teeth. – Dental Classics in Perspective, Volume 2, 1999

 - “1575—In France Ambrose Pare, known as the Father of Surgery, publishes his Complete Works. This includes practical information about dentistry such as tooth extraction and the treatment of tooth decay and jaw fractures,” (ADA).

 - The first dental book in English, The Operator for the Teeth by Charles Allen, was published in 1685.

 - In 1723 French surgeon Pierre Fauchard published Le Chirurgien Dentiste (The Surgeon Dentist, A Treatise on Teeth).

Fauchard is credited as being the Father of Modern Dentistry because his book was the first to describe a comprehensive system for the practice of dentistry including basic oral anatomy and function, operative and restorative techniques, and denture construction (ADA).

 - The Natural History of the Human Teeth was published by John Hunter in 1771, followed by A Practical Treatise on Diseases of the Teeth in 1778.

These works revolutionised the practice of dentistry and provided a basis for later dental research. The natural history of human teeth is a detailed study of the mouth, jaws and teeth. Its plates are exceptionally clear and accurate (King’s College London, ISS).

 - In 1890 Willoughby Miller publishes Micro-Organisms of the Human Mouth, utilizing the germ theory to explain tooth decay. “This generates an unprecedented interest in oral hygiene and starts a world-wide movement to promote regular toothbrushing and flossing,” (ADA).  The picture below is the Human Mouth as a Focus of Infection, Plate 3, courtesy of the University of Michigan Dentistry Library.

Micro-Organisms of the Human Mouth

Dream Anatomy

The Winter edition of the SHARP newsletter features a review of a recent exhibit at the National Library of Medicine called Do Mandrakes Really Scream? Magic and Medicine in Harry Potter. The exhibit was designed for children and isn’t very substantive, but it does have some cool images. Overall a pretty creative way to interest kids in history and rare books. I know my ten-year-old self would have been completely enthralled, even without the Harry Potter connection.

  • Mandrake from the Hortus sanitatis, Mainz, 1491, hosted by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.

Mandrake - Hortus sanitatis

I spent some time looking around the Library of Medicine’s other online exhibitions and was really intrigued by Dream Anatomy. A detailed look at anatomy texts over the centuries, it begins with an explanation of the various technologies used to reproduce anatomical images in books, a thoughtful addition that could have been easily overlooked.

The body of the exhibit covers texts from the mid 15th century up to the Visible Human project of the 1990s, analyzing the intellectual milieus in which the works were created and connecting the images to science and technology, philosophy, religion and fine art. The exhibit also discusses how the presentation of human anatomy changed over time, from fanciful, dramatic and sometimes humorous to more “scientific” and dispassionate.

  • Copperplate engraving by John Browne, London, 1681. Hosted by the National Library of Medicine.

John Brown Anatomical Image

“Browne’s figures dance and posture with theatrical gestures. Here a seductive coquette flirtatiously displays her musculature.”

I was particularly interested in the page on the Modernist work of Fritz Kahn, who combined images of the organic body with those of technology. I would love to have Der Mensch als Industriepalast (Man as Industrial Palace), below, on my wall. (I think a visit to ABE is in order to get some of his books.)

  • Chromolithograph by Fritz Kahn , Stuttgart, Germany, 1926. Hosted by the National Library of Medicine.

Der Mensch als Industriepalast

“Kahn’s modernist visualization of the digestive and respiratory system as “industrial palace,” really a chemical plant, was conceived in a period when the German chemical industry was the world’s most advanced.”

The Library has a number of other online exhibits featuring subjects like Arabic manuscripts, medical ephemera, Frankenstein, and the horse in medicine. The only real criticism I could make is that each exhibit is organized differently and some are difficult to navigate or less user-friendly than I would like. But I definitely recommend that, unless you’re quite squeamish, you check out Dream Anatomy.