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A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière

A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière (French: Une leçon clinique à la Salpêtrière) is an 1887 group tableau portrait painted by the history and genre artist André Brouillet (1857–1914). The painting, one of the best-known in the history of medicine,[1] shows the neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot giving a clinical demonstration with patient Marie Wittman to a group of postgraduate students. Many of his students are identifiable; one is Georges Gilles de la Tourette, the physician who described Tourette syndrome.

A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière
ArtistPierre Aristide André Brouillet
Year1887
Dimensions290 cm × 430 cm (110 in × 170 in)
LocationParis Descartes University, Paris, France

It hangs in a corridor of the Descartes University in Paris.

History edit

 
André Brouillet.

The painting is a large work—"remarkable for its dimensions, the figures being nearly life size"[2]—measuring 290 cm × 430 cm,[3] and is painted in bright, highly contrasting colours.[4] It was painted by Brouillet at the age of thirty from individual studies made of the thirty participants,[5] and presented in the prevailing tradition of academic group portraits. It was first displayed (with favourable notices) at the salon d'art of 1 May 1887, and later purchased by the Académie des Beaux-Arts for 3,000 francs.[6]

Brouillet was a pupil of the academic painter Jean-Léon Gérôme who was, himself, also renowned for the fact that his paintings, such as Phryne before the Areopagus (1861), were so popular as prints that it seemed they were "painted in order to be reproduced."[7]

The setting edit

The painting represents an imaginary scene of a contemporary scientific demonstration, based on real life, and depicts the eminent French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893) delivering a clinical lecture and demonstration at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris (the room in which these demonstrations took place no longer exists at the Salpêtrière).[6]

On the rear wall of the lecture room is the (1878) large charcoal work, drawn by the anatomist and medical artist Paul Richer, which reproduces the hysterical pose captured in one of the many photographs taken in the Salpêtrière.

Entitled Periode de contortions ("During the contortions"), it depicts "a woman convulsing and assuming the arc-in-circle" posture:[6] the arc en circle, or Opisthotonus, "the hysteric's classic posture".[8]

 
Electrotherapeutic device invented by Charcot's teacher, Guillaume Duchenne (1806–1875).

Morloch (2007, p. 133), from his study of the actual painting, remarks on the striking and dramatic coincidence that, "in 1878 Richer reproduced the pose in [his] drawing from a photograph ... [and] now, 1887 ... the hysteric is reproducing in life the pose from the drawing."

Resting on the table to Charcot's right "are a reflex hammer and what is thought to be a Duchenne electrotherapy apparatus".[6]

The participants edit

Except for the four individuals to Charcot's left, the participants are arranged in two concentric arcs: the inner circle displaying "sixteen of his current and former physician associates [arranged] in reverse order of seniority", and the outer, depicting "the older generation of [physician associates] ... along with philosophers, writers, and friends of Charcot".[6]

Both Signoret (1983, p. 689) and Harris (2005, p. 471) have identified each of the individuals depicted in Brouillet's tableau; and Signoret (passim) provides substantial biographical details of each.

The Charcot group edit

The Charcot group of five are (from right-to-left): Mlle. Ecary, a nurse at the Salpêtrière; Marguerite Bottard, the Salpêtrière's nursing director; Joseph Babinski (1857–1933), Charcot's chief house officer; Marie "Blanche" Wittman, Charcot's patient; and Jean-Martin Charcot himself.

 
Albert Londe's photograph of a male Salpêtrière patient exhibiting the same contortions as those displayed in Richer's charcoal drawing.

The inner window-side group edit

The six sitting in the window-side of the painting are (from right to left): Paul Richer (1849–1933), medical artist, anatomist and physician (who created the painting on the back wall); Charles Samson Féré (1852–1907), psychiatrist, Charcot's assistant, and Charcot's secretary; Pierre Marie (1853–1940), neurologist; Édouard Brissaud (1852–1909), neurologist and pathologist; Paul-Adrien Berbez (1859–?), physician, and a student of Charcot, and neurologist; and Gilbert Ballet (1853–1917), destined to be one of Charcot's last chief residents.

The outer window-side group edit

The six standing at the window-side of the painting are (from right to left): Alix Joffroy (1844–1908), anatomical pathologist, neurologist and psychiatrist; Jean-Baptiste Charcot (1867–1936), Charcot's son, at the time a medical student and, later, a polar explorer; Mathias-Marie Duval (1844–1907), Professor of anatomy and histology; Georges Maurice Debove (1845–1920), later Dean of the medical school; Philippe Burty, art collector, critic, and writer; and Victor André Cornil (1837–1908), pathologist, histologist, and politician.

The remaining group edit

 
A wood-engraved reproduction of Brouillet's painting by Henri Dochy (1851–1915).[9]

The remainder are either sitting parallel to the back wall, or on the side of the lecture theatre immediately opposite the windows. The remaining thirteen individuals are (from left to right): Théodule-Armand Ribot (1839–1916), psychologist; Georges Guinon (1859–1932), neuropsychiatrist, and one of Charcot's last chief residents;[10] Albert Londe (1858–1917), medical photographer, and chronophotographer (wearing an apron); Léon Grujon Le Bas (1834–1907),[11] chief hospital administrator at Salpêtrière; Albert Gombault (1844–1904), neurologist and anatomist; Paul Arène (1843–1896), novelist; Jules Claretie (1840–1913), journalist and literary figure; Alfred Joseph Naquet (1834–1916), physician, chemist, and politician; Désiré-Magloire Bourneville (1840–1909), neurologist and politician; Henry Berbez (with pen and notebook), younger brother of Paul-Adrien Berbez (who is sitting opposite at the table); Henri Parinaud (1844–1905), ophthalmologist and neurologist; Romain Vigouroux (1831–1911), chief of electrodiagnostics, discoverer of the electrical activity of the skin (in the skull-cap);[12][circular reference] and, finally, in the apron, Georges Gilles de la Tourette (1857–1904), neurologist and physician.

Current location edit

Apparently the painting has only recently returned to Paris, having "spent most of its life in obscurity in Nice and Lyon."[13] Today it hangs, unframed, in a corridor of the Descartes University in Paris, near to the entrance of the Museum of the History of Medicine, which houses one of the oldest collections of surgical, diagnostic, and physiological instrumentation in Europe.[14]

Reproductions edit

In the nineteenth century, a considerable number of different versions of the original painting were produced.

Morloch's approximation (2007, p. 135) is that there were at least fifteen uniquely different reproductions produced by techniques as varied as "engraving, etching, lithograph(y), photogravure, along with other photomechanical processes" between the painting's first appearance in 1887, and its disappearance from public view in 1891.

Freud's lithograph edit

Sigmund Freud had a small (38.5 cm × 54 cm)[15] lithographic version of the painting, created by Eugène Pirodon (1824–1908), framed and hung on the wall of his Vienna rooms from 1886 to 1938.[13]

Once Freud reached England, it was immediately placed directly over the analytical couch in his London rooms.[16]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ ""Un Leçon Clinique à la Salpêtrière" (1887) by André Brouillet – Himetop". himetop.wikidot.com. Retrieved 2022-11-11.
  2. ^ Micale (2004), p. 74.
  3. ^ Signoret (1983), p. 689.
  4. ^ Morlock (2007), p. 129.
  5. ^ Morlock (2007, p. 135) argues that most of these individual studies would have been taken by a photographer, rather than sketched by an artist. In support of his claim, Morlock draws attention to the "lack of interaction between the figures in the scene and the marked failures of their sightlines to meet".
  6. ^ a b c d e Harris (2005), p. 471.
  7. ^ Morloch (2007), p. 134.
  8. ^ Telson (1980), p. 58.
  9. ^ The vertical crease in the middle of this image indicates that it has been taken from an (otherwise unidentified) bound volume and formed a double-page supplement.
  10. ^ "Georges Guinon (1859–1932)". data.bnf.fr. Retrieved 2022-11-11.
  11. ^ Bachelin-Deflorenne, Antoine (1866). État présent de la noblesse française (in French). Bachelin-Deflorenne.
  12. ^ Widacki, Jan (2015). "Discoverers of the Galvanic Skin Response". ResearchGate. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
  13. ^ a b Morlock (2007), p. 131.
  14. ^ History of Medicine Topographical Database.
  15. ^ Morlock (2007), p. 130.
  16. ^ According to Morlock (2007, p. 130) — who suggests that "[it is almost] as if the painting itself was painted in order to be reproduced" — Pirodon's lithographic reproduction of Brouillet's original "was so successful that it was published at least three times by two separate printers".

References edit

  • Alvarado, C. (May 2009). "Nineteenth-Century Hysteria and Hypnosis: A Historical Note on Blanche Wittmann" (PDF). Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis. 37 (1): 21–36.
  • Geisler, S. (2011). "Une Leçon Clinique à la Salpêtrière (A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière), Andre Brouillet (1887)". The Journal of Physician Assistant Education. 22 (3): 41–42. doi:10.1097/01367895-201122030-00007. PMID 22070064.
  • Harris, J.C. (May 2005). "A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière". Archives of General Psychiatry. 62 (5): 470–472. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.62.5.470. PMID 15867099.
  • Kemp, M.; Wallace, M. (2000). Spectacular Bodies: The Art and Science of the Human Body from Leonardo to Now. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-5202-2792-7.
  • Marshall, J. (January 2008). "Dynamic Medicine and Theatrical Form at the fin de siècle: A formal analysis of Dr Jean-Martin Charcot's pedagogy, 1862–1893". Modernism/Modernity. 15 (1): 131–153. doi:10.1353/mod.2008.0002. S2CID 144910071.
  • Micale, M.S. (2004), "Discourses of Hysteria in Fin-de-Siècle France", pp.71–92 in M.S. Micale (ed.), The Mind of Modernism: Medicine, Psychology, and the Cultural Arts in Europe and America, 1880–1940, Redwood City, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-4577-2
  • Morlock, F. (March–June 2007). "The Very Picture of a Primal Scene: Une leçon clinique à la Salpêtrière". Visual Resources. 23 (1–2): 129–146. doi:10.1080/01973760701219594. S2CID 192071715.
  • Signoret, J.L. (December 1983). "Une leçon clinique à la Salpêtrière (1887) par André Brouillet". Revue Neurologique. 139 (12): 687–701. PMID 6364290.
  • Telson, H.W. (January 1980). "Une leçon du docteur Charcot à la Salpêtrière". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 35 (1): 58–59. doi:10.1093/jhmas/XXXV.1.58. PMID 6988496.
  • Walusinski, O. (May 2011). "Marguerite Bottard (1822–1906), Nurse under Jean-Martin Charcot, Portrayed by G. Gilles de la Tourette". European Neurology. 65 (5): 279–285. doi:10.1159/000327313. PMID 21487229.
  • Walusinski, O. (2021). Une Leçon Clinique à La Salpêtrière, André Brouillet, une peinture de la neurologie autour de Charcot. Brou (France): Oscitatio. ISBN 978-2-9573-4360-7.

clinical, lesson, salpêtrière, french, leçon, clinique, salpêtrière, 1887, group, tableau, portrait, painted, history, genre, artist, andré, brouillet, 1857, 1914, painting, best, known, history, medicine, shows, neurologist, jean, martin, charcot, giving, cli. A Clinical Lesson at the Salpetriere French Une lecon clinique a la Salpetriere is an 1887 group tableau portrait painted by the history and genre artist Andre Brouillet 1857 1914 The painting one of the best known in the history of medicine 1 shows the neurologist Jean Martin Charcot giving a clinical demonstration with patient Marie Wittman to a group of postgraduate students Many of his students are identifiable one is Georges Gilles de la Tourette the physician who described Tourette syndrome A Clinical Lesson at the SalpetriereArtistPierre Aristide Andre BrouilletYear1887Dimensions290 cm 430 cm 110 in 170 in LocationParis Descartes University Paris FranceIt hangs in a corridor of the Descartes University in Paris Contents 1 History 2 The setting 3 The participants 3 1 The Charcot group 3 2 The inner window side group 3 3 The outer window side group 3 4 The remaining group 4 Current location 5 Reproductions 5 1 Freud s lithograph 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Andre Brouillet The painting is a large work remarkable for its dimensions the figures being nearly life size 2 measuring 290 cm 430 cm 3 and is painted in bright highly contrasting colours 4 It was painted by Brouillet at the age of thirty from individual studies made of the thirty participants 5 and presented in the prevailing tradition of academic group portraits It was first displayed with favourable notices at the salon d art of 1 May 1887 and later purchased by the Academie des Beaux Arts for 3 000 francs 6 Brouillet was a pupil of the academic painter Jean Leon Gerome who was himself also renowned for the fact that his paintings such as Phryne before the Areopagus 1861 were so popular as prints that it seemed they were painted in order to be reproduced 7 The setting editThe painting represents an imaginary scene of a contemporary scientific demonstration based on real life and depicts the eminent French neurologist Jean Martin Charcot 1825 1893 delivering a clinical lecture and demonstration at the Pitie Salpetriere Hospital in Paris the room in which these demonstrations took place no longer exists at the Salpetriere 6 On the rear wall of the lecture room is the 1878 large charcoal work drawn by the anatomist and medical artist Paul Richer which reproduces the hysterical pose captured in one of the many photographs taken in the Salpetriere Entitled Periode de contortions During the contortions it depicts a woman convulsing and assuming the arc in circle posture 6 the arc en circle or Opisthotonus the hysteric s classic posture 8 nbsp Electrotherapeutic device invented by Charcot s teacher Guillaume Duchenne 1806 1875 Morloch 2007 p 133 from his study of the actual painting remarks on the striking and dramatic coincidence that in 1878 Richer reproduced the pose in his drawing from a photograph and now 1887 the hysteric is reproducing in life the pose from the drawing Resting on the table to Charcot s right are a reflex hammer and what is thought to be a Duchenne electrotherapy apparatus 6 The participants editExcept for the four individuals to Charcot s left the participants are arranged in two concentric arcs the inner circle displaying sixteen of his current and former physician associates arranged in reverse order of seniority and the outer depicting the older generation of physician associates along with philosophers writers and friends of Charcot 6 Both Signoret 1983 p 689 and Harris 2005 p 471 have identified each of the individuals depicted in Brouillet s tableau and Signoret passim provides substantial biographical details of each The Charcot group edit The Charcot group of five are from right to left Mlle Ecary a nurse at the Salpetriere Marguerite Bottard the Salpetriere s nursing director Joseph Babinski 1857 1933 Charcot s chief house officer Marie Blanche Wittman Charcot s patient and Jean Martin Charcot himself nbsp Albert Londe s photograph of a male Salpetriere patient exhibiting the same contortions as those displayed in Richer s charcoal drawing The inner window side group edit The six sitting in the window side of the painting are from right to left Paul Richer 1849 1933 medical artist anatomist and physician who created the painting on the back wall Charles Samson Fere 1852 1907 psychiatrist Charcot s assistant and Charcot s secretary Pierre Marie 1853 1940 neurologist Edouard Brissaud 1852 1909 neurologist and pathologist Paul Adrien Berbez 1859 physician and a student of Charcot and neurologist and Gilbert Ballet 1853 1917 destined to be one of Charcot s last chief residents The outer window side group edit The six standing at the window side of the painting are from right to left Alix Joffroy 1844 1908 anatomical pathologist neurologist and psychiatrist Jean Baptiste Charcot 1867 1936 Charcot s son at the time a medical student and later a polar explorer Mathias Marie Duval 1844 1907 Professor of anatomy and histology Georges Maurice Debove 1845 1920 later Dean of the medical school Philippe Burty art collector critic and writer and Victor Andre Cornil 1837 1908 pathologist histologist and politician The remaining group edit nbsp A wood engraved reproduction of Brouillet s painting by Henri Dochy 1851 1915 9 The remainder are either sitting parallel to the back wall or on the side of the lecture theatre immediately opposite the windows The remaining thirteen individuals are from left to right Theodule Armand Ribot 1839 1916 psychologist Georges Guinon 1859 1932 neuropsychiatrist and one of Charcot s last chief residents 10 Albert Londe 1858 1917 medical photographer and chronophotographer wearing an apron Leon Grujon Le Bas 1834 1907 11 chief hospital administrator at Salpetriere Albert Gombault 1844 1904 neurologist and anatomist Paul Arene 1843 1896 novelist Jules Claretie 1840 1913 journalist and literary figure Alfred Joseph Naquet 1834 1916 physician chemist and politician Desire Magloire Bourneville 1840 1909 neurologist and politician Henry Berbez with pen and notebook younger brother of Paul Adrien Berbez who is sitting opposite at the table Henri Parinaud 1844 1905 ophthalmologist and neurologist Romain Vigouroux 1831 1911 chief of electrodiagnostics discoverer of the electrical activity of the skin in the skull cap 12 circular reference and finally in the apron Georges Gilles de la Tourette 1857 1904 neurologist and physician Current location editApparently the painting has only recently returned to Paris having spent most of its life in obscurity in Nice and Lyon 13 Today it hangs unframed in a corridor of the Descartes University in Paris near to the entrance of the Museum of the History of Medicine which houses one of the oldest collections of surgical diagnostic and physiological instrumentation in Europe 14 Reproductions editIn the nineteenth century a considerable number of different versions of the original painting were produced Morloch s approximation 2007 p 135 is that there were at least fifteen uniquely different reproductions produced by techniques as varied as engraving etching lithograph y photogravure along with other photomechanical processes between the painting s first appearance in 1887 and its disappearance from public view in 1891 Freud s lithograph edit Sigmund Freud had a small 38 5 cm 54 cm 15 lithographic version of the painting created by Eugene Pirodon 1824 1908 framed and hung on the wall of his Vienna rooms from 1886 to 1938 13 Once Freud reached England it was immediately placed directly over the analytical couch in his London rooms 16 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Une lecon clinique a la Salpetriere Pitie Salpetriere Hospital The Salpetriere School of Hypnosis Other paintings on medical subjects The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Deijman Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp The Gross Clinic The Agnew ClinicFootnotes edit Un Lecon Clinique a la Salpetriere 1887 by Andre Brouillet Himetop himetop wikidot com Retrieved 2022 11 11 Micale 2004 p 74 Signoret 1983 p 689 Morlock 2007 p 129 Morlock 2007 p 135 argues that most of these individual studies would have been taken by a photographer rather than sketched by an artist In support of his claim Morlock draws attention to the lack of interaction between the figures in the scene and the marked failures of their sightlines to meet a b c d e Harris 2005 p 471 Morloch 2007 p 134 Telson 1980 p 58 The vertical crease in the middle of this image indicates that it has been taken from an otherwise unidentified bound volume and formed a double page supplement Georges Guinon 1859 1932 data bnf fr Retrieved 2022 11 11 Bachelin Deflorenne Antoine 1866 Etat present de la noblesse francaise in French Bachelin Deflorenne Widacki Jan 2015 Discoverers of the Galvanic Skin Response ResearchGate Retrieved 18 November 2022 a b Morlock 2007 p 131 History of Medicine Topographical Database Morlock 2007 p 130 According to Morlock 2007 p 130 who suggests that it is almost as if the painting itself was painted in order to be reproduced Pirodon s lithographic reproduction of Brouillet s original was so successful that it was published at least three times by two separate printers References editAlvarado C May 2009 Nineteenth Century Hysteria and Hypnosis A Historical Note on Blanche Wittmann PDF Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 37 1 21 36 Geisler S 2011 Une Lecon Clinique a la Salpetriere A Clinical Lesson at the Salpetriere Andre Brouillet 1887 The Journal of Physician Assistant Education 22 3 41 42 doi 10 1097 01367895 201122030 00007 PMID 22070064 Harris J C May 2005 A Clinical Lesson at the Salpetriere Archives of General Psychiatry 62 5 470 472 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 62 5 470 PMID 15867099 Kemp M Wallace M 2000 Spectacular Bodies The Art and Science of the Human Body from Leonardo to Now Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 5202 2792 7 Marshall J January 2008 Dynamic Medicine and Theatrical Form at the fin de siecle A formal analysis of Dr Jean Martin Charcot s pedagogy 1862 1893 Modernism Modernity 15 1 131 153 doi 10 1353 mod 2008 0002 S2CID 144910071 Micale M S 2004 Discourses of Hysteria in Fin de Siecle France pp 71 92 in M S Micale ed The Mind of Modernism Medicine Psychology and the Cultural Arts in Europe and America 1880 1940 Redwood City CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4577 2 Morlock F March June 2007 The Very Picture of a Primal Scene Une lecon clinique a la Salpetriere Visual Resources 23 1 2 129 146 doi 10 1080 01973760701219594 S2CID 192071715 Signoret J L December 1983 Une lecon clinique a la Salpetriere 1887 par Andre Brouillet Revue Neurologique 139 12 687 701 PMID 6364290 Telson H W January 1980 Une lecon du docteur Charcot a la Salpetriere Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 35 1 58 59 doi 10 1093 jhmas XXXV 1 58 PMID 6988496 Walusinski O May 2011 Marguerite Bottard 1822 1906 Nurse under Jean Martin Charcot Portrayed by G Gilles de la Tourette European Neurology 65 5 279 285 doi 10 1159 000327313 PMID 21487229 Walusinski O 2021 Une Lecon Clinique a La Salpetriere Andre Brouillet une peinture de la neurologie autour de Charcot Brou France Oscitatio ISBN 978 2 9573 4360 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Clinical Lesson at the Salpetriere amp oldid 1186126639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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