12022-03-17T21:46:39+00:00KSL Exhibitsad59ae249b808d7092ad4d02c088e1a23747e1282022 Case Western Reserve University SubmissionsDaniela Solomon33structured_gallery2024-03-19T17:57:45+00:00Daniela Solomone316041929e7cb3504341dbd1e9eb2f7bd821a14
Eileen Faulk CWRU Undergraduate Student Systems Biology
Sagittal Thoughts This drawing was inspired by the process and art of human plastination. Plastination is a method of preserving flesh to prevent rapid decay and to isolate the structure of that anatomical part in time. Invented by the German anatomist Dr. Gunther von Hagens, this process involves removing all the water from a body, replacing it with liquid plastics, and finally hardening the body through heat. In his BODY WORLDS exhibition, Dr. von Hagens displays carefully plastinated human specimens as a reflection of life and death. Having visited this exhibition in the past year, I was awed by the detail and intricacy that makes us up and how those details can be captured in time, mapped out, and classified. This particular drawing is of a plastinated human head, sliced through the sagittal plane which divides the body into left and right. The mediums used were colored pencil, ink, and charcoal.