Introduction
The
interior of our bodies is hidden to us. What happens beneath the skin is
mysterious, fearful, amazing. In antiquity, the body's internal structure
was the subject of speculation, fantasy, and some study, but there were
few efforts to represent it in pictures. The invention of the printing
press in the 15th century-and the cascade of print technologies that
followed-helped to inspire a new spectacular science of anatomy, and new
spectacular visions of the body. Anatomical imagery proliferated, detailed
and informative but also whimsical, surreal, beautiful, and grotesque — a
dream anatomy that reveals as much about the outer world as it does the
inner self.
 
Over the centuries anatomy has become a visual vocabulary of
realism. We regard the anatomical body as our inner reality, a medium
through which we imagine society, culture and the human
condition.
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