Night at the Museum of Anatomy 2 - Past, Present and Future

Published: 10 December 2018

Thursday 31 January 2019

Thursday 31 January 2019
6.00pm – 8.00pm (doors open at 5.30pm)
Thomson Building, University of Glasgow
Admission free - booking required

Please note, you must be 16 or over to attend this event.

Back by popular demand, the event Night at the Museum of Anatomy 2 - Past, Present and Future will enable a further opportunity to experience this very special event! The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow and the Clinical Anatomy Skills Centre, the University of Glasgow's Anatomy Facility, the Hunterian Museum and the School of Simulation and Visualisation are collaborating for this very special event in such a unique historical venue!

Join us for a range of demonstrations, displays and participate in some of our interactive displays showing how we have visualised, studied and taught human anatomy over the centuries, from William Hunter in the 18th Century to the latest in digital visualisation. Participate in creation of your own anatomical models with felt, anatomical body painting, augmented reality and virtual reality simulation. The event will be opened by Professor Fabio Quondamatteo and Dr Paul Rea from the Anatomy Facility in the Thomson Building on the main campus of the stunning University of Glasgow. The opening and introductions to the evening will begin promptly at 6.00pm in the Large Lecture Theatre in the Thomson Building, then we will move through to the Museum of Anatomy. Please arrive promptly for the event to start at 6.00pm.

We will have stands covering the following areas for you to explore:

Hunter and Cleland Specimens
Explore unique historical anatomical specimens dating from the 1700's and 1800's, unique to us here in the Museum of Anatomy. These are original specimens from the collections of William Hunter and John Cleland, renowned anatomists from the 18th and 19th centuries respectively.

William Macewen - Innovation in Surgery
Find out about one of Glasgow's most influential surgeons, Sir William Macewen. A former Regius Professor of Surgery at the University of Glasgow, come and learn how he taught pioneering concepts in neurosurgery, orthopaedics, and forensic medicine in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Plastination
This process was invented in the late 1970's enabling us to preserve specimens for use in teaching and research. View specimens of the human body which have been preserved by this very special technique.

Clinical Anatomy Skills Centre
The Clinical Anatomy Skills Centre is a joint partnership between the University of Glasgow and the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow supported by the William and Elizabeth Davies Charitable Foundation.Come and see how surgeons, medical professionals and dentists are trained in the modern world of simulation training utilising the cadaveric resources of the West of Scotland Donation Programme.

Visualising Medical Heritage Project
Our Visualising Medical Heritage Project brings medical history to life, enabling enhanced access to our museum collection through cutting edge visualisation technology. Learn about Glasgow's rich medical history and the major role that Glasgow practitioners have played in advancing healthcare practice.

Felt Anatomy and Anatomical Body Painting
With part of this station devoted to Felt Anatomy, here you will be able to create your own tactile felt anatomy figures, with all the major organs and body parts. This will take you back many years and let you recreate those memories, and have great fun in the process! The other half of this station will be body painting, which will be part of Art-Beat, Art & Anatomy Edinburgh, an association of Anatomy@Edinburgh link medical students and the public to local medical professionals and artists to help in the understanding of human anatomy through artistic methods.

Medical Visualisation and Human Anatomy
The School of Simulation and Visualisation at The Glasgow School of Art is a leading academic and research institution which is located at the interface between science, technology and the arts in order to explore innovative and creative uses of digital visualisation and interactive technologies. Through the joint MSc programme in Medical Visualisation and Human Anatomy with the Anatomy Facility, School of Life Sciences in the University of Glasgow, the School of Simulation and Visualisation empowers postgraduate students from different academic backgrounds to creatively develop their own technologically based framework to the domain of life sciences. In this unique Masters programme, students are given the opportunity to explore the use of immersive and interactive technologies while building up anatomical knowledge.

Book your place via Bookitbee.


First published: 10 December 2018

<< 2019