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BMJ 2005;330:100 (8 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.330.7482.100
An exhibition at the National Museum of Health and Medicine, Washington DC, until June 2005.
Admission free http://nmhm.washingtondc.museum/exhibits/revealed/index.html
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| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
For this exhibition artists have tried to create a model of the human body by combining real images with hand-drawn pictures, to "show the body, not as medical illustrations, but as it actually is." That is to say, the artists have taken anatomical data from magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, and electron microscopy, reconstructed it in three dimensions, and then added colour, shadows, and shapes by hand. The result, they say, "is the art in science: to turn science into art."
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Close encounters: an image of hair and (below) the endocrine and cardiovascular systems
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The images come from the latest book by the journalist and impresario Alexander Tsiaras, whose Anatomical Travelogue company produces multimedia medical content for print and television. The inside cover of the new book, which was released on the day the exhibition opened in November, modestly likens Tsiaras to Andreas Vesalius.
The first picture in the
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Daniel Engber, freelance journalist
Washington DC, United States engber@lehrer.ucsf.edu
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