Saturday, September 3, 2011

"Not for the Squeamish: The History of Artists and Anatomists," Lecture/Studio Class, Jonathon Rosen, School of Visual Arts


For all of you New Yorkers out there: friend of Morbid Anatomy Jonathon Rosen has just alerted me to an amazing sounding class he'll be teaching as part of The School of Visual Art's continuing education series. He has also asked me to give a lecture as part of the course, so maybe I'll see you there!

This class is open and available to all; full details below. Hope very much to see you there!
Not for the Squeamish: The History of Artists and Anatomists
ILC-2196-A
T, Sep 20 - Nov 22
Hours: 06:30PM - 09:15PM
2.50 CEUs; $335.00
Course Status: Open
Location: TBA
Register for this class by clicking here!

Temple of the soul or soft machine? The human body is a place where art, science, culture, politics and medicine intersect. This lecture/studio course will focus on artists from ancient to modern who use the body as a point of departure for personal, political, religious or scientific commentary, and will provide an opportunity for students to do likewise. The influence of traditional medical imagery on contemporary art-making and pop culture will be explored through the lens of history, culture and aesthetics. Examples will range from medieval manuscripts and obscure Renaissance medical surrealism through enlightenment era wax-works, Victorian charts and medical devices to Damien Hirst, the virtual human project, Bodyworlds, and beyond. Aesthetic surgery, genetics, biomechanics, medical museums, anatomy in movies, French underground comix and anatomical oddities will also be considered. Your assignment will be to respond to the lectures with several editorial artworks that incorporate medicine or anatomy-be it personal or political, singular or narrative, 2D or 3D, static or moving. Students may use the medium of their choice; projects are not required to be anatomically correct. Prerequisite: A basic drawing, photo-collage or photography course, or equivalent.

Jonathon Rosen
Painter, illustrator, animator

One-person exhibitions include: La Luz De Jesus Gallery, Los Angeles; Adam Baumgold Fine Art; Studio Camuffo, Venice

Group exhibitions include: Triennali, Milan; Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco; P.S. 1, Contemporary Art Center; Kunstwerk, Berlin; Exit Art

Publications include: American Illustration Annual, Print, World Art, LA Weekly, Eye (London)

Books include: Intestinal Fortitude, The Birth of Machine Consciousness

Clients include: The New York Times, Snake Eyes, Time, Rolling Stone, MTV, Blab!, Sony Music, The Ganzfeld, Details. Journal drawings for Sleepy Hollow, Tim Burton, director

Awards and honors include: Gold and silver medals, Society of Publication Designers; artist-in-residence, Harvestworks

Website: http://jrosen.org/
You can find out more--and register!--by clicking here.

Image: Wound man' : flesh tinted: weapons coloured. mid 15th century. More here.
From Wellcome Images 0013467 Credit: Wellcome Library, London
From: Anathomia, (English)
By: Claudius (Pseudo) Galen
folio 53 verso
Collection: Archives & Manuscripts
Library reference no.: WMS 290 and Slide number 8801

3 comments:

Plague said...

What can you tell us about that print that headlines this post? Love it.

JE said...

Hi Plague; just updated the post with an image credit; I had to ask the teacher and thus the delay. Here it is:

Image: Wound man' : flesh tinted: weapons coloured. mid 15th century. More here.
From Wellcome Images 0013467 Credit: Wellcome Library, London
From: Anathomia, (English)
By: Claudius (Pseudo) Galen
folio 53 verso
Collection: Archives & Manuscripts
Library reference no.: WMS 290 and Slide number 8801

Thanks for asking!

Plague said...

Thank you!