Enfilade

Workshop | Images in Comparative Anatomy, 1500–1900

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on September 23, 2023

Next month at the Bibliotheca Hertziana, as noted at ArtHist.net:

Drawing Comparisons: Images in Comparative Anatomy, 1500–1900
In-person and online, Bibliotheca Hertziana, Villino Stroganoff, Rome, 20 October 2023

Comparison of the skeleton of a bird and a man; from Pierre Belon, Histoire de la nature des oyseaux (Paris: Guillaume Cavellat, 1555).

The history of art and the practice of anatomy have long depended upon similar acts of comparison: identifying, visualizing, and describing likenesses. This workshop investigates the role of images in developing comparative anatomy—the study of anatomy across species—in early modern Europe.

Visual or formal analysis entails a search not only for forms but for likenesses. To look closely is, in other words, to look across. Anatomy, likewise, depends upon comparison. From Leonardo to Linnaeus, early modern anatomical knowledge materialized through bodies conceived as similar. The discipline of comparative anatomy emerged, specifically, as generalizations occurred across the human/nonhuman divide. The history of the anatomical image is also a history of violence, as those anatomical procedures allowing comparison (dissection and vivisection) often proceeded through the forceful manipulation, observation and depiction of the (non)human body. Scholars from various disciplines (history of art, history of science and medicine, philosophy, fine arts, paleontology) will consider the use of images in generating comparison and in both formulating and challenging comparative anatomical knowledge.

p r o g r a m m e

10.30  Introduction
• Alejandro Nodarse (Bibliotheca Hertziana / Harvard University) A Guide to Looking Across

11.00  Session One | Drawing Order
• Martin Clayton (Royal Collection Trust, Windsor Castle), ‘Describe the Jaw of a Crocodile’: Leonardo da Vinci’s Animal Anatomies
• Katrina van Grouw (University of Cambridge) Linnaeus Organized: Illustrating Convergence in Comparative Anatomy

12.30  Lunch Break

13.30  Session Two | Languages of Likeness
• Maria Conforti (Sapienza Università di Roma), Fruits, Mushrooms, and Trees: Botanical Imagery in Early Modern Surgery and Anatomy
• Paul North (Yale University), Likeness Looks Both Ways

15.00  Coffee Break

15.30  Session Three | Violence in the Comparative
• Thomas Balfe (Courtauld Institute), Skin Deep? Visualizing Human and Animal Violence in Early Modern Still Life Painting
• Rose Marie San Juan (University College London), Anatomical Violence and the Pain of Resemblance

17.00  Pause

17.15  Roundtable Discussion