Jean Martin Charcot: Urban Sketcher

I have always been interested in physicians who incorporated art into their life and practice, and one of them was Jean Martin Charcot.   A towering figure in the medical world of the 19th Century, Charcot was born in 1825 and finished medical school at age 23.  He became director of the Saltpêtrière in Paris, an asylum for beggars, prostitutes and the insane, where he carried the title of Professor of Pathological Anatomy and developed this former gun factory into a center for neurology and neurophysiology.  His clinic attracted students from all over Europe, and he is remembered today for many diseases which bear his name. Charcot in his clinic at the Saltpêtrière in Paris Charcot also has the distinction of using art and photography to study his patients, but few are aware that Charcot carried a sketchbook in his travels.  Today Charcot would be considered an Urban Sketcher. Charcot died in 1893, and in 1898, Henry Meige published a selection from Charcot’s sketchbooks.  The publication is available on-line through the HathiTrust Digital Library, and a copy is owned by the New York Academy of Medicine.  When I learned of this publication I wanted to make copies available to Urban Sketchers, but could not get good quality from the scans on the web.  So I went to the New York Academy of Medicine Rare Book Room where I was allowed to photograph the sketches which are reproduced in this post. Charcot likely used a dip pen with metal nib.  He dabbled in scen...
Source: Jeffrey M. Levine MD | Geriatric Specialist | Wound Care | Pressure Ulcers - Category: Geriatrics Authors: Tags: Art & Medicine history Jeff Levine MD Jeffrey M Levine MD medical history medicine and art sketchbook Source Type: blogs