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Currently on public display
+ Display Store, Powerhouse Discovery Centre, Castle Hill
Theme containing this object
Models > Anatomical models

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Anatomical model of the human digestive organs, 1850 - 1894
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Object statement
Anatomical model, human digestive organs, papier-mache / plaster / paint, maker unknown, 1850-1894
This object comes from a collection of anatomical teaching models transferred from the Sydney Technical College in 1894. In 1878 the New South Wales State Government provided subsides to provide scientific, technical and professional training and in 1883 a Board of Technical Education was appointed which established the Sydney Technical College.

Made during between 1850 and 1900 these models are examples of early teaching aids available to Australian students of the practical sciences.

By the early 1800s medical and scientific teaching expanded and there was an increase in demand for anatomical models. Wax which had been used to make models was replaced by other materials which were less delicate and susceptible to changes in temperature. Modellers like Tramond and Auzoux found papier-mâché more robust and it enabled them to fashion models in sections which could be removed in layers as if a real dissection were taking place.

Louis Thomas Jérome Auzoux was a French medical graduate who around 1820 visited the workshop of Ameline who had introduced papier-mâché to the modelling process. Auzoux soon learnt the process and set up a workshop in his home town of Saint Aubin d'Ecrosville in 1827. His medical background enabled him to make highly accurate models while his experiments with papier-mâché resulted in the development of a variety of finishes which incorporated plaster, fabric and glass. The other aspect of Auzoux's success was his application of moulding techniques which allowed him to re-produce his models.

A common feature of many of Auzoux's models is the use of paint on a thin plaster layer which covered the papier-mâché. Studio artists were employed to add the finishing touches using egg tempura which gave a shiny gloss to the finished work. Iron supports were included to reinforce the delicate areas of some models and metal was sometimes used to connect separate parts. This process continued to be favoured by other nineteenth century modellers such as F. Rammé of Hamburg in Germany.

References
New South Wales State Government Archives, http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/cguide/c4g/educ0016.htm, cited 17/11/2006.
Grob, B.W.J., 'The anatomical models of Louis Auzoux', in 'A descriptive catalogue', Colophon, Museum Boerhaave Communication 305, Leiden, Germany, 2004
Lemire, M, 'Representation of the human body: the colored wax anatomic models of the 18th and 19th centuries in the revival of medical instruction', Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy, Volume 14, 1992
Scholtz, Gerhard (2005), Better than the real thing? Models - The Third Dimension of Science.
Acta Zoologica 86 (4), 303-305, doi: 10.1111/ j.1463-6395.2005.00193.x
Chen, Joseph C. T. M.D., Ph.D.; Amar, Arun P. M.D.; Levy, Michael L. M.D.; Apuzzo, Michael L. J. M.D., 'The Development of Anatomic Art and Sciences: The Ceroplastica Anatomic Models of La Specola', Neurosurgery. 45(4):883, October 1999

Geoff Barker, March, 2007
This model was made around 1850-1894.

 This text content licensed under CC BY-NC.

Description
Anatomical model, human digestive organs, papier-mache / plaster / paint, maker unknown, 1850-1894

Model of the human digestive organs made of painted plaster and papier-mache and mounted on a large rectangular wooden board. The model shows the stomach painted cream with brown vessels, the pancreas and the small and large intestines, painted cream and green. The mount is painted dark brown and on the rear are two rectangular pieces of wood and a pair of gold eye hooks attached, from which the model can be hung.

Made: 1850 - 1894
Marks
Black printed numbers on small square pieces of paper are stuck to the exterior of the organs. The numbers are (from top to bottom) '14', '24', '15', '16', '23', '17', '18', '9', '20', '21' and '22'.
H1738
Production date
1850 - 1894
Height
60 mm
Width
330 mm

 This text content licensed under CC BY-SA.
Acquisition credit line
Gift of Sydney Technical College, 1894
Subjects
+ Health
+ Anatomy
+ Teaching
Currently on public display
+ Display Store, Powerhouse Discovery Centre, Castle Hill
Short persistent URL
Concise link back to this object: http://from.ph/233955
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{{cite web |url=http://from.ph/233955 |title=Anatomical model of the human digestive organs |author=Powerhouse Museum |accessdate=26 May 2013 |publisher=Powerhouse Museum, Australia}}


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