i went to see Gunther von Hagens' BodyWorlds this weekend. if you ever have a chance to see this exhibition, i recommend it highly. it's not skeery and it's not squeamy. something about the plastination process makes the exhibits very friendly and accesible and you will definitely come away with a deeper appreciation for the complexity of your body.



i love these cross-sections.
they remind me of shrinky dinks.

From: [identity profile] bachsoprano.livejournal.com


Ooooooooo! I really wanted to see that! I started a sciene degree once upon a time and dissections were the only things I enjoyed...I'm fascinated by how our bodies function!

Did they have the horse there? I heard there was a horse....

From: [identity profile] babalueye.livejournal.com


Easy-Bake Anatomy.....I was especially grateful that I got to see this exhibit after having a well rounded education in anatomy. It made it so awesomely interesting.....being able to look at things like this and actually KNOW what youre seeing is amazing....the body is truly a miracle, so complex and yet so simple functionally.

I think the idea that the exhibit carried so much controversy initially is extremely amusing...what with the idea that we are all actually MORTAL, and somehow people thought that might be too dirty and ugly to put on display. The show itself is very tasteful and largely educational in the way its laid out. I think it should be required viewing for anyone in the various health professions.

I never needed to see this show as "art". It is what it is, a scientific catalogue of what we are made of. No one can escape it, we all have one of those squishy little jobbies called a "spleen'.....its just a fact. I also really liked the idea that they showed examples of unhealthy organs and tissues along side the healthy ones.....this really gives a perspective of how fragile we really are and how our lifestyles do indeed effect us immensely. To the more experienced viewer, it also shows an incredible perspective on how our bodies bend and reshape and compensate for our evironment .....I think not only getting to see a real spine was interesting, but getting to see three or four and how different they were from each other according to the individual was the real pay-off.

Two thumbs up for Gunther and his merry band of shrinky dinkies! Vote Plastination in 2008!


From: [identity profile] babalueye.livejournal.com


OH!

And mad-vascular props to GVH for incorporating the kinesthetic aspects into the displays....seeing everything in action is the most effective lesson in the exhibit.

From: [identity profile] countrysoaper.livejournal.com


I have heard that every person featured in the exhibits was known to the artist in one capacity or another.

From: (Anonymous)


That's pretty interesting.

I wouldn't mind donating my body to something like that after death. I always liked the idea of my body parts helping others even after I've left this world. It'd be way cool if my body is molded like that skateboarder picture! Or the one riding the horse. ^_^ That's a really neat, educational display. I'd love to see it, and it sounds like something I could tolerate since I have one of the wimpiest stomachs in the world. XD

From: [identity profile] geckobird.livejournal.com


... I posted a comment. Then realized that I wasn't logged in. So the anonymous one is me.

LJ just won't remember me anymore. Am I that forgettable, LJ?

From: [identity profile] utter-scoundrel.livejournal.com


I missed this when it came through Chicago. The media, as usual, made a controversial mountain out of a non-controversial molehill...

Shrinky dinks. That takes me back.
.