Browse DSI

Details of the item << Previous   Next >>

   Matthews
   Robert Wilson
   R. W. M. ;
   
   
   1880 in Edinburgh
   1940
   
   
   
   studied lithography and design at the Edinburgh College of Art and the Royal Scottish Academy Life School
   Scotland, UK
   favored draftsman for the University of Edinburgh anatomists Daniel John Cunningham: Cunningham’s Text-Book of Anatomy, ed. E. B. Jamieson & J. C. Brash, 7th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1937) ; E. B. Jamieson, Illustrations of Regional Anatomy, 6th ed., 7 volumes (Edinburgh: E. & S. Livingstone, 1946) ; surgeon David Middleton Greig at the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh: Clinical Observations on the Surgical Pathology of Bone (Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1931) ; David M. Greig; Intertarsal Developmental Anklyosis, in: Edinburgh Med. J. 42, 1 (1935): 21-37 ; Acrodysplasia. Type: Syndactylic Oxycephaly, in: Edinburgh Med. J. 42, 11 (1935): 537-60 ; Vertebral Osteosis, in: Edinburgh Med. J. 42, 4 (1935): 205-20 ; R. D. Lockhart, G. F. Hamilton & F. W. Fyfe: Anatomy of the Human Body (London: Faber & Faber, 1959) ;
   Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh ;
   
   medical, anatomical, anesthetical, obstetrical, pathologal, physiologal, and surgical pencil drawing ;
   https://www.pinterest.de/pin/54958057923392832/ ;
   Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Museum ;
   Samuel J. M. M. Alberti: Drawing damaged bodies. British medical art in
the 20th c., in: Bulletin in the History of Medicine 92,1 (2018): 462-69 ; Violet Tansey & D. E. C. Mekie: The Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (Edinburgh: Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, 1982) ; Dawn Kemp with Sara Barnes, Surgeon’s Hall: A Museum Anthology (Edinburgh: Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, 2009) ; Iain M. C. Macintyre: Chamber of Curiosities. A Short History and Guide to Surgeons’ Hall Museums (Edinburgh: Someone, 2015).
   Since 1921, for the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh; since 1946 on the staff of the Edinburgh publisher E & S Livingstone.
   
   
   







Powered by: DaDaBIK, the Low-code Development Platform        

Done!