Virtual Exhibitions

From Faculty of Medicine Online Museum and Archive

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(Currently in the Anderson Stuart Common Room)
 
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| title1=Read...|text1= [https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/ObservacionesMedicae.pdf Rare Medical Book of the Month: Observationes Medicae (1641) by Nicholaes Tulp]<featureimage id="FMMUS3453"
| title1=Read...|text1= [https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/ObservacionesMedicae.pdf Rare Medical Book of the Month: Observationes Medicae (1641) by Nicholaes Tulp]<featureimage id="FMMUS3453"
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<featureimage id="FMMUS3453" align="center" displaycaption="n" />|title2=Read...|text2=}}
=About Virtual Exhibitions=
=About Virtual Exhibitions=
Throughout our central campus we have various exhibitions related to the Faculty of Medicine. These links will preview these exhibitions for you in a virtual context and provide details of visiting hours in each of the venues.  
Throughout our central campus we have various exhibitions related to the Faculty of Medicine. These links will preview these exhibitions for you in a virtual context and provide details of visiting hours in each of the venues.  
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3387" align="left" w="100" caption="no"/>||[https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/Rats_in_The_Realm-History_of_Plague.pdf '''Plague: Rats in the Realm''']
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3540" align="left" w="100" displaycaption="n"/>||[https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/Rats_in_The_Realm-History_of_Plague.pdf '''Plague: Rats in the Realm''']
Plague is one of the most deadly diseases to have affected humans over the centuries. To scientists, it is an infection caused by bacterium; to historians its three pandemics are the greatest natural disasters of all time; to artists and writers it symbolises the fragility of human life.  
Plague is one of the most deadly diseases to have affected humans over the centuries. To scientists, it is an infection caused by bacterium; to historians its three pandemics are the greatest natural disasters of all time; to artists and writers it symbolises the fragility of human life.  
Plague first appeared in Europe in the sixth century during the reign of the Emperor Justinian. This first pandemic lasted for two hundred years. Three centuries later it reappeared in Europe as the ‘Black Death’ – the second pandemic which killed thousands and devastated populations across the continent until the end of the 17th century. In the mid-19th century the third pandemic caused millions of deaths in Asia and spread along Pacific trade routes to Australia. This third pandemic challenged the new science of bacteriology, which at last provided the understanding needed to control plague.  
Plague first appeared in Europe in the sixth century during the reign of the Emperor Justinian. This first pandemic lasted for two hundred years. Three centuries later it reappeared in Europe as the ‘Black Death’ – the second pandemic which killed thousands and devastated populations across the continent until the end of the 17th century. In the mid-19th century the third pandemic caused millions of deaths in Asia and spread along Pacific trade routes to Australia. This third pandemic challenged the new science of bacteriology, which at last provided the understanding needed to control plague.  
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Beautifully depicted with images from our Rare Books collection, this exhibition explores the understandings and impact of plague since the sixth century, through to our contemporary understanding of the disease today.
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Beautifully depicted with images from our [http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare '''Rare Books'''] collection, this exhibition explores the understandings and impact of plague since the sixth century, through to our contemporary understanding of the disease today.
Exhibition: From May 2009 to February 2010.
Exhibition: From May 2009 to February 2010.
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=Previously in the Anderson Stuart Common Room=
=Previously in the Anderson Stuart Common Room=
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3387" align="left" w="100" caption="no"/>||[https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/SliceofLife.pdf '''A Slice of Life: the development of Anatomy and Dissection in the Faculty of Medicine''']
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3387" align="left" w="100" displaycaption="n"/>||[https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/SliceofLife.pdf '''A Slice of Life: the development of Anatomy and Dissection in the Faculty of Medicine''']
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This exhibition celebrated the re-opening of the J T Wilson Museum after its recent refurbishment. The curators and architects have combined forces to provide a striking modern environment for anatomical study which does justice to the collection built up over more than a century by our anatomy staff and students. With the opening of the medical school and the arrival of Professor Anderson Stuart, anatomy took a central place in our medical curriculum. In 1890, James Thomas Wilson was appointed as Foundation Challis Professor of Anatomy. Since Anderson Stuart’s time there have been a series of Professors of Anatomy, each who have made significant contributions to Anatomy within the University and elsewhere. Their biographies and achievements are depicted alongside a photo gallery of the first 60 years of prosectors. Exhibition: From October 1 2008 to end March 2009.
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This exhibition celebrated the re-opening of the [http://www.anatomy.usyd.edu.au/museums/wilson/index.html '''J T Wilson Museum'''] after its recent refurbishment. The curators and architects have combined forces to provide a striking modern environment for anatomical study which does justice to the collection built up over more than a century by our anatomy staff and students. With the opening of the medical school and the arrival of [[Anderson Stuart, Thomas Peter|'''Professor Anderson Stuart''']], anatomy took a central place in our medical curriculum. In 1890, [[Wilson, James Thomas|'''James Thomas Wilson''']] was appointed as Foundation Challis Professor of Anatomy. Since Anderson Stuart’s time there have been a series of Professors of Anatomy, each who have made significant contributions to Anatomy within the University and elsewhere. Their biographies and achievements are depicted alongside a photo gallery of the first 60 years of prosectors. Exhibition: From October 1 2008 to end March 2009.
Written by Drs Lise Mellor, Vanessa Witton and Professor Yvonne Cossart. Enquiries: Dr Lise Mellor 9036 3366.
Written by Drs Lise Mellor, Vanessa Witton and Professor Yvonne Cossart. Enquiries: Dr Lise Mellor 9036 3366.
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3390" align="left" w="100" caption="no"/>||[[Caricatures of Faculty by Lionel Lindsay, 1916| '''Larikin Portraits: Lionel Lindsay's 1916 Caricatures of Faculty Staff''']]
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3350" align="left" w="100" displaycaption="n"/>||[[Photographs taken by the Faculty's first Dean, Professor John Smith]]
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Adorning the walls of the Bosch Medical Library are a selection of reproductions of caricatures drawn by Lionel Lindsay of Faculty members in 1916. The original caricatures were commissioned and paid for by medical students to illustrate the pages of the Sydney University Medical Journal and Senior Year Books. They were reprinted voluminously over the years and the originals now rest in the University of Sydney Art Collection. Exhibition: Permanent exhibition as part of the [https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/heritagetrail_brochure.pdf Medical Heritage Trail]. To purchase copies of these Lionel Lindsay caricatures [[click here]]. Funds raised will go to the restoration of MedSoc photographic archives. Any enquiries can be directed to the managing curator [http://www.usyd.edu.au/perl-bin/phlookup.cgi?type=people&name=Lise+Mellor&Submit+Query.x=0&Submit+Query.y=0&title=&position=&department=&phone= '''Dr Lise Mellor'''].
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[[Smith, The Hon. John|'''Professor John Smith''']] was Foundation Dean of the Faculty of Medicine. He was an exceptionally talented amateur photographer and his photographic work has historical significance in terms of the development of the visual arts in Australia. Aside from his service to the University, Professor Smith’s lasting memorial is an extensive collection of historic photographs of the University and Sydney surrounds taken between 1855 and 1880. This exhibition of 20 of his photographs shows his broad reaching interest in photographic technique and subject. Within the University he documented the building of the Great Hall and Main Quadrangle, the first sandstone buildings at Grose Farm. Smith was also a skilled portrait photographer and his work represents family, friends and University associates of the time. His interior family and group portraits also show us something of mid nineteenth century social life and interior architecture. He was equally accomplished as a landscape photographer, evident in his beautiful images of Sydney Harbour, Woolloomooloo, Lane Cove River and the Blue Mountains. Because of the long-timed exposures, typical of photographic technique at that time, Smith himself is present in many of his photographs. For copies of these images or to view the entire John Smith collection, please make your enquiry directly to the [http://www.usyd.edu.au/arms/archives/about.shtml '''University Archives'''.]
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=Fisher Library, Level 2=
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This exhibition is part of the [https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/heritagetrail_brochure.pdf '''Medical Heritage Trail'''].  
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'''University Place'''
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|<embedimage id="FMMUS3350" align="left" w="100" caption="no"/>||[[Photographs taken by the Faculty's first Dean, Professor John Smith]]
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Professor John Smith was Foundation Dean of the Faculty of Medicine. He was an exceptionally talented amateur photographer and his photographic work has historical significance in terms of the development of the visual arts in Australia. Aside from his service to the University, Professor Smith’s lasting memorial is an extensive collection of historic photographs of the University and Sydney surrounds taken between 1855 and 1880. This exhibition of 20 of his photographs shows his broad reaching interest in photographic technique and subject. Within the University he documented the building of the Great Hall and Main Quadrangle, the first sandstone buildings at Grose Farm. Smith was also a skilled portrait photographer and his work represents family, friends and University associates of the time. His interior family and group portraits also show us something of mid nineteenth century social life and interior architecture. He was equally accomplished as a landscape photographer, evident in his beautiful images of Sydney Harbour, Woolloomooloo, Lane Cove River and the Blue Mountains. Because of the long-timed exposures, typical of photographic technique at that time, Smith himself is present in many of his photographs. From November 24 2008 until February 27 2009.
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Fisher Library Opening Hours during University term
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Monday to Thursday 8.30am -10pm
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Friday 8.30am -8pm
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Saturday 9am -5pm
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Sunday 1pm -5pm
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This exhibition is part of the [https://www.sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mediabank/repository/pdfs/heritagetrail_brochure.pdf Medical Heritage Trail]. To purchase copies of these John Smith photographs [[click here]]. Funds raised will go to the restoration of photographic archives. Enquiries: Dr Lise Mellor 61 2 9036 3366.
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=*Coming Soon*=
 
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*Nicholson Museum Exhibitions online
 
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*Macleay Museum Exhibitions online
 
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*Vesalius in the Wilson Museum
 
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*[http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/medicine/home.html Hippocrates to Harrison, Rare Books Electronic Exhibition]
 

Current revision as of 00:47, 27 July 2009

Slice of Life
Arthur Edward Mills
Professor John Smith by Great Hall


About Virtual Exhibitions

Throughout our central campus we have various exhibitions related to the Faculty of Medicine. These links will preview these exhibitions for you in a virtual context and provide details of visiting hours in each of the venues.

Currently in the Anderson Stuart Common Room

Anderson Stuart Building, Eastern Avenue

Poster, Rats in The Realm
Plague: Rats in the Realm

Plague is one of the most deadly diseases to have affected humans over the centuries. To scientists, it is an infection caused by bacterium; to historians its three pandemics are the greatest natural disasters of all time; to artists and writers it symbolises the fragility of human life.

Plague first appeared in Europe in the sixth century during the reign of the Emperor Justinian. This first pandemic lasted for two hundred years. Three centuries later it reappeared in Europe as the ‘Black Death’ – the second pandemic which killed thousands and devastated populations across the continent until the end of the 17th century. In the mid-19th century the third pandemic caused millions of deaths in Asia and spread along Pacific trade routes to Australia. This third pandemic challenged the new science of bacteriology, which at last provided the understanding needed to control plague.

Beautifully depicted with images from our Rare Books collection, this exhibition explores the understandings and impact of plague since the sixth century, through to our contemporary understanding of the disease today.

Exhibition: From May 2009 to February 2010.

Curated by Drs Lise Mellor, Vanessa Witton and Professor Yvonne Cossart. Enquiries: Dr Lise Mellor 9114 1164.

Previously in the Anderson Stuart Common Room

Slice of Life
A Slice of Life: the development of Anatomy and Dissection in the Faculty of Medicine

This exhibition celebrated the re-opening of the J T Wilson Museum after its recent refurbishment. The curators and architects have combined forces to provide a striking modern environment for anatomical study which does justice to the collection built up over more than a century by our anatomy staff and students. With the opening of the medical school and the arrival of Professor Anderson Stuart, anatomy took a central place in our medical curriculum. In 1890, James Thomas Wilson was appointed as Foundation Challis Professor of Anatomy. Since Anderson Stuart’s time there have been a series of Professors of Anatomy, each who have made significant contributions to Anatomy within the University and elsewhere. Their biographies and achievements are depicted alongside a photo gallery of the first 60 years of prosectors. Exhibition: From October 1 2008 to end March 2009.

Written by Drs Lise Mellor, Vanessa Witton and Professor Yvonne Cossart. Enquiries: Dr Lise Mellor 9036 3366.

Bosch Medical Library

Bosch Building 1A, between Blackburn Circuit and Cadigal Lane

Professor John Smith by Great Hall
Photographs taken by the Faculty's first Dean, Professor John Smith

Professor John Smith was Foundation Dean of the Faculty of Medicine. He was an exceptionally talented amateur photographer and his photographic work has historical significance in terms of the development of the visual arts in Australia. Aside from his service to the University, Professor Smith’s lasting memorial is an extensive collection of historic photographs of the University and Sydney surrounds taken between 1855 and 1880. This exhibition of 20 of his photographs shows his broad reaching interest in photographic technique and subject. Within the University he documented the building of the Great Hall and Main Quadrangle, the first sandstone buildings at Grose Farm. Smith was also a skilled portrait photographer and his work represents family, friends and University associates of the time. His interior family and group portraits also show us something of mid nineteenth century social life and interior architecture. He was equally accomplished as a landscape photographer, evident in his beautiful images of Sydney Harbour, Woolloomooloo, Lane Cove River and the Blue Mountains. Because of the long-timed exposures, typical of photographic technique at that time, Smith himself is present in many of his photographs. For copies of these images or to view the entire John Smith collection, please make your enquiry directly to the University Archives.

This exhibition is part of the Medical Heritage Trail.