Delight or Disgust? The Afterlife of Anatomical Waxworks

Authors

  • Marla Dobson Museum of Health Care at Kingston
  • Emma Rosalind Peacocke Queen's University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i3.3235

Keywords:

waxworks, obstetrics, art, medicine, exhibition

Abstract

How do we display the uncanny? During the Second World War the medical school of Queen’s University (Canada) commissioned artist Marjorie Winslow to make a series of wax teaching models to illustrate childbirth, in three dimensions, for the benefit of medical students. How have curators displayed these obstetric waxworks, which provoke strong feelings of disgust or of horrified empathy? Even in storage in the Museum of Healthcare at Kingston, the Winslow waxworks remain concealed behind a curtain, and when they are on display, they are now far more likely to be part of in an art exhibition than a medical history display. This paper uses the early history of obstetric waxworks and their display in eighteenth-century Italy to show how medical waxworks have always challenged the disciplinary divide between art and science. This historical context informs our understanding of the display history of the Winslow waxworks and of uncanny objects in general.

Author Biographies

Marla Dobson, Museum of Health Care at Kingston

Marla Dobson holds a Master's degree in Museum Studies from the University of Toronto as well as a PhD in Art History from Queen's Univeristy. She has worked for over ten years in the culture and heritage sector in Canada and in the UK. In her role as the Curator for the Museum of Health Care at Kingston, she is committed to exploring histories of objects and things, particularly within the context of the medical humanities.

Emma Rosalind Peacocke, Queen's University

Emma Rosalind Peacocke has held Banting and Bader Postdoctoral Fellowships in the English Department of Queen’s University, Canada. She is excessively proud of being the first candidate to defend her thesis in the “Production of Literature” English doctoral programme at Carleton University. Emma’s monograph, Romanticism and the Museum, was published by Palgrave in 2015; her second book-length project is on Romanticism and the university. She slipped into waxwork studies while writing about Fleetwood, an 1805 novel by Mary Wollstonecraft’s husband William Godwin. Fleetwood features a prank with a puppet in an Oxford college, and a horrifying scene with an Italian waxwork.

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Published

11/29/2019

How to Cite

Dobson, M., & Peacocke, E. R. (2019). Delight or Disgust? The Afterlife of Anatomical Waxworks. Museum & Society, 17(3), 362–376. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i3.3235