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ClosedReopening May 2025

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A sculptural assemblage featuring anatomical eye models

The Anatomy Lesson

When

This exhibition has now ended.

Location

The Potter Museum of Art, Cnr of Swanston St and Masson Rd, Parkville

The Anatomy Lesson included a wonderful range of images and objects sourced from the university's many distinctive collections. Seventeenth-century anatomical texts and prints from the Special Collections at the Baillieu Library were juxtaposed with paintings and drawings from the University of Melbourne Art Collection and the Victorian College of the Arts Collection. The exhibition was laid out in the form of a giant atlas of the human body, with the feet pointing west and the brain contained within the annex gallery to the east.

Anatomia is an ancient personification of division who carries a mirror and a knife, dangerous accessories that point to two of the many lessons of anatomy to be found in this exhibition, namely reflection and dissection.

Images of dissection crowd the pages of the seventeenth and eighteenth-century anatomical texts included in the exhibition, from the convivial cadavers of William Cowper to the elegant idealised bones of Albinus. Dissection is also a much beloved metaphor of contemporary artists like Sally Smart who, in her 1994 work, Anatomy Lesson, pulled apart and opened up that other famous image of art and medicine – The Anatomy Lesson of Nicholas Tulp by Rembrandt.

The Anatomy Lesson also included traditional drawing and figure studies by National Gallery School students in Melbourne. These historical works emphasize the play of muscles and tendons under the skin and the weight and texture of charcoal and pencil. Life drawing is a lesson in volumes and surfaces, and, at its best, it's also evidence of intense reflection.

Reflection in the form of self-knowledge is a lesson found in much of the contemporary work in this exhibition. Siobhan Murphy's dance video work looks at the way the body reveals underlying emotion through tiny gestures. Artist Ruth Hutchinson looks at us through eyes of folded paper and surprises us with her heart and lungs of knitted silk and optic fibre. Hutchinson specializes in a particular kind of restrained, often beautiful art that is scientific in appearance yet frequently contains a lesson that is unsettling and intimate.

Artists and anatomists share a long history of imagining the body, using their knowledge of what can be seen to reveal and understand what is unseen – the life that lies beneath the surface. The Anatomy Lesson celebrated this shared history as one of three exhibitions that have been envisioned and organised under the overall title A Body of Knowledge to mark 150 years since the foundation of the Melbourne Medical School. Other exhibitions include The Art of Teaching: Models and Methods, held in the Baillieu Library, and The Art of Teaching: the Clinical Schools, held at the Medical History Museum, Brownless Biomedical Library.

Curated by Jenny Long.