Call for Papers: Art, Anatomy, and Medicine since 1700

Picasso

Science and Charity. Pablo Picasso, 1897. The Picasso Museum, Barcelona

Art, Anatomy, and Medicine since 1700 is a two-day symposium sponsored by the University of South Carolina’s Provost’s Office and the School of Visual Art & Design, with cooperation from the Columbia Museum of Art.  It will take place in the Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, South Carolina, March 31-April 1, 2016.

The symposium organizer seeks proposals for papers that address visual, theoretical, cultural, historical and/or contemporary connections, relationships, conflicts and/or collaborations among the visual arts, anatomy/dissection, and medicine from the eighteenth century to the present.

Participants may be historians of art, medicine, science or technology, art educators, medical professionals, artists (who may propose to contextualize their own work), etc. Successful papers may also be invited for publication in an edited volume of the same theme.
Broad topics may include (but are certainly not limited to):
• The role of anatomy in artists’ training (past, present and/or future)
• Artists’ roles in the creation/dissemination of anatomical knowledge
• Artistic representation of anatomical and medical professionals
• Anatomical and medical models: from écorché figures to nano-imagery
• Anatomy as art, art as anatomy
• Anatomical displays, exhibitions (e.g. Body Worlds), and collections: from curious to educational to controversial
• Corpses, dissection and grave-robbing in art, literature and medical history
• Imaging bodily surface and anatomical depth: from sculpture to M.R.I.s and beyond
• Beyond human, superhuman, inhuman(e)?: technological ‘improvements’, additions and extensions of human anatomy from prosthetics/implants to Google glasses
• Zombies and vampires, and the creative/fantastic defiance of or resistance to anatomical, medical and worldly reality
• The evolutionary human in art and science: looking backward and looking ahead
• Parts vs. whole: the functions of specificity and generality in aesthetics and visual medical information

Please send cover letter, abstract (no more than 3 pages, double-spaced typed), and CV to:
Dr. Andrew Graciano, Associate Professor of Art History and Associate Director
School of Visual Art & Design
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208 USA
or by email to: graciano@mailbox.sc.edu.
Proposal deadline: July 1, 2015

For a related article in Spanish, see:

Pedraz, Miguel Vicente. “Body and society in the Libro de la anathomía del hombre by Bernardino Montaña de Monserrate: an anatomist’s political dream“. Hist. cienc. saude-Manguinhos vol.20  supl.1 Rio de Janeiro Nov. 2013.

No comments

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Whewell’s Gazette: Vol. #46 | Whewell's Ghost - [...] University of South Carolina: CfP: Art, Anatomy, and Medicine since 1700 [...]

Post a comment