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Exquisite Bodies: or the curious and grotesque story of the anatomical model 07/08/2009
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Open until 18 October 2009 at The Wellcome Collection. |
Open until 18 October 2009 at The Wellcome Collection.
In the 19th century, despite the best efforts of body snatchers, the
demand from medical schools for fresh cadavers far outstripped the
supply. One solution to this gruesome problem came in the form of
lifelike wax models. These models often took the form of alluring
female figures that could be stripped and split into different
sections. Other models were more macabre, showing the body ravaged by
’social diseases’ such as venereal disease, tuberculosis and alcohol
and drug addiction.
The exhibition enables visitors to reflect on what these models tell
us about Victorian attitudes to anatomical knowledge and issues
including sexual reproduction, contagious disease and death. A
combination of the beautiful and the grotesque, the examples on show
are derived from European collections and museums of the 18th, 19th and
early 20th centuries. They range from superbly accurate specimens
designed for private use in teaching in anatomical theatres to models
destined for often illiterate audiences in less salubrious parts of
town, where displays highlighted the widespread fear of sexually
transmitted diseases.www.wellcomecollection.org source: www.fadwebsite.com  |
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