4B - Thursday, September 20, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4B - Thursday, September 20, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom MASTERPIECES From Page 1B Interpreting the image In the five years since the Uni- versity acquired Thom's Great Moments in Medicine, Gifts of Art Director Elaine Sims has been busy, as she described it, "finding homes" for the 45 paintings. Her two main concerns were security of the artwork - achievedbypro- tective museum glass and a lock- ing system that mounts art to the wall - and how to install the art throughout the medical campus in a meaningful way. Because the series was gifted to the UMHS, it was intended to be put on display for the public within that environment. Sims described the difficulties of hang- ing public art, especially in a hos- pital setting. "It's always a challenge," she said, "Because in a hospital, art has a job to do. It can't just sit on the wall and look pretty ... You have no idea what people are experiencing as they're going through (the halls). As many as 10,000 people a day walk by any piece of artwork and they have to understand it immediately, they can't work at it. It's not a moment to educate or cause discomfort." Working through the chal- lenges a hospital environment can create, Sims installed 11 of Thom's Great Moments in Medi- cine paintings on the walls of the UMHS, including some at the facility's main entrance and more near the Ford Amphitheater. Paintings from the series that might alarm hospital patients were hung elsewhere. Fifteen were placed on the second floor of the Taubman Health Sciences Library and, as Sims noted, the most iconic (and bloody) pieces were hung outside the South Lecture Hall in Medical Sci- ence Building II. This decision was made so that the medical students using this lecture hall would be able to interact with the artworks. However, medical students aren't the only ones to observe Thom'; cine se Histor cine in the 18t has tak the pai Science "If y history an in explair resoure sion ab Evenr a way how w Hov look "Treph He wa about though or is it themes Furthe inhere do tho unders "The us tha ten in "While depict actuall deeply in whi could i Accc Parke, expens Great] Great series. ed res each p consul were cc eled to proces level o1 "You said, c article. people their p archite time, t and the My res s Great Moments in Medi- forget they're paintings and feel ries. Howell, who teaches that you're actually there." y 234, "History of Medi- From a purely artistic the Western World from approach, Sims believes Thom h Century to the Present," accomplished thatgoal. ken undergraduates to view "They're very evocative - the intings hanging in Medical colors, the composition, the exot- e Building II. icness of many of them," she said. you want to understand the "They just seem to draw people y of health care, they're in." nportant resource," he McNamara remembers her ned. "They're an important father, a surgeon, hanging repro- ce for stimulating discus- ductions of Thom's work in his out the events they depict. office. She described the paint- more importantly, they're ings as having "a documentary of helping us think about quality to them." e conceptualize history." "They don't aggregate towards cell asks his students to a single narrative. Each is a sepa- critically at images like rate moment," she said. "As such, pining in Ancient Peru." they're tiles in a mosaic. Indi- nts them to ask questions vidually they may be beautiful the art: Can history be objects or interesting objects, and It of as "great moments," depending on how the tiles in a more accurate to consider mosaic are arranged, they may or s of underlying change? may not configure a final narra- rmore, what biases are tive moment." nt in the artwork and how But all documentaries, no mat- se viewpoints impact an ter how rich in detail and factual- tanding of history? ly straightforward, are inherently ey're useful for reminding biased in countless ways. Though t history is always writ- Thom researched each painting the present," Howell said. to the most minute detail and e they were intended to wanted each scene to be histori- historical events as they cally accurate, Sims explained ly happened, they were that Thom used his wife, children embedded in the culture and neighbors to pose as a diver- ch they were created. How sity of famous individuals from t be otherwise?" a multitude of cultures and eras. Duffin and Li argued that this Tiles in a mosaic decision could hardly be consid- ered as factually accurate. ording to Duffin and Li, Thom himself was concerned Davis & Co. spared no with his work being timeless. e in the creation of the "Twenty years from now peo- Moments in Medicine and ple will forget the paintings were Moments in Pharmacy done today," he said, again in Duf- Exhaustive, detail-orient- fin and Li's article. "They must be earch was conducted for done right. I have a tremendous painting. Specialists were power to transport the viewer. ted, sets and costumes But I have the same power to mis- onstructed and Thom trav- lead." Europe twice during the Duffin and Li also posited that s to ensure the highest Thom, who was painting the f accuracy. series during the 1950s and '60s, u can't fake history," Thom was biased by the social norms ited in Duffin and Li's of his time, especially in his por- "You have to know how trayal of women and minorities. lived, what they wore, The women are rarely active in hysical surroundings, the the paintings, and seem to be cture and furniture of the included simply for aesthetic he tools of the physicians enhancement of the art. e house-hold implements ... As for Thom's portrayal of ponsibility is to make you minorities, two paintings of the I I COURTESY OF GIFTS OF ART Images from Robert Thom's series depict medical practices from all around the world. Great Moments in Medicine series are seen as especially mis- leading: "Primitive Medicine" and "J. Marion Sims: Gynecologic Surgeon." The first depicts a top- less Native American woman being healed within a wooden structure, surrounded by mem- bers of her community. Though nothing about the painting seems "primitive," Thom problemati- cally titled this artwork as such. The second depicts J. Marion Sims - known as the father of American gynecology - and two white men surrounding an Afri- can American woman perched on a table, while two African Ameri- can women watch from behind a curtain. The scene is supposed to celebrate Sims' cure of vesicovag- inal fistula, a condition women experience during traumatic labor. This piece fails to reflect, however, that Sims was only able to make his discovery due to fre- quent human experimentation on enslaved women. Neither of these paintings are currently on display. As Sims explained, she is searching for "a place where peo- ple are prepared to see something like that and have a discussion." Until then, they will remain in the University of Michigan Muse- um of Art's storage facility. For Howell, these biases and prejudices are an important angle to study and think about in terms of the history of medicine, and how that history is written. "They depicted an image of medicine and an idea of medicine that has already passed," How- ell said. "These paintings show doctors as deities, almost - who you might want to be if you were a medical student or deeply want to be cared for by if you were a potential patient." "They're a snapshot of how, at a particular time and a particu- lar place, this was the history of medicine," he added. "We are not at that time or place anymore, and if we were to hire someone to depict the history of medicine, it would look very different." Always looking back In spite of the potentially controversial nature of some of Thom's works, Sims maintains that the art remains extremely popular. She continues to receive requests for use of the images in publications and to tour the col- lection. Perhaps this lingering affec- tion for Robert Thom and his Great Moments in Medicine series is because, to the gen- eration that grew up with them, they are, as Sims described, "old friends." "They mean different things to different people," Kelch said. "To medical students, I hope that they give them a sense of where medi- cine was and how far we've come. And also, how little we know today. There's so much more to learn. For the public, I hope it gives them a sense of the tremen- dous change that has occurred." "We have a way of repeating ourselves," he added. "Hopefully by learning about history this way and studying the past, we can be more- modest, more humble and better physicians." 4 4 4 4 vi 4 0 0