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Sigmund Freud once hung a copy of this popular lithograph, Une Leçon
du Docteur Charcot à la Salpêtrière, in his consultation
room in Vienna. Part of a collection of prints assembled by Yale psychiatrist
Clements C. Fry, M.D., it shows a hypnotized woman during a lecture on
hysteria.
Peter Arno’s charcoal and watercolor cartoon depicting a psychiatrist
and his patient appeared in The New Yorker in 1936.
Anatomical Theatre at Leiden was sold as a souvenir at the University
of Leiden in the Netherlands. The well-dressed men and women touring the
dissection hall in this 1610 engraving by W. Swanenburg show that the
upper classes of 17th-century Europe were interested in anatomy.
Illustrations: Clements C. Fry Collection of
Medical Prints and Drawings (3) |
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At 50, one of the world’s best collections
of medical imagery draws on humor and history.
By Cathy Shufro

A woman diagnosed with hysteria is the centerpiece of a popular
lithograph, a copy of which once adorned Sigmund Freud’s consultation
room in Vienna. The 1887 print shows the hypnotized woman before a roomful
of men. Two assistants reach out to break her fall; beside her, French
neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot lectures about hysteria.

Une Leçon du Docteur Charcot à la Salpêtrière
is part of the collection of prints on medical topics that Yale psychiatrist
Clements C. Fry, M.D., began assembling in the early 1930s. When Fry,
the former director of student mental health at Yale, died in 1955, he
left his 2,000 prints to the university. Now nearing its 50th anniversary,
it is one of the world’s largest and most prominent collections
of medical prints.

Fry selected prints as records of medicine’s history and
public image; for their rarity; and—as often as not—because
he found them funny: a 1937 New Yorker cartoon by Whitney Darrow Jr. shows
a woman dressed as Napoleon, complete with sword, campaign hat and oversized
epaulets. Her hand tucked into her jacket, she faces a balding psychiatrist
across the desk, who tells her: “It’s a pity I didn’t
get to your case earlier, Mrs. Perkins.”

An 1859 lithograph by Honoré Daumier combines satire with historical
evidence that lay people tried their hands at the novel therapy of hypnotism.
A man dangles a huge diamond ring above the face of a mesmerized matron.
“The new entertainment at parties,” the caption reads, “or,
how to amuse and make a fool of yourself in public without a quarrel.”

By day Fry, who joined the faculty in 1926 and pioneered mental
health for students, ran the Division of Mental Hygiene at the Department
of University Health. He devoted his leisure time to collecting, says
Susan E. Wheeler, M.A., curator of the Clements C. Fry Collection of Medical
Prints and Drawings, which is housed in the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library.
“This was his avocation, his relaxation. To be a collector was very
typical in that era in this environment,” says Wheeler, whose book,
Five Hundred Years of Medicine in Art (Ashgate), catalogs the collection.

Fry considered his bachelor apartment at Trumbull College a sort
of medical museum, but his intent was less scholarship than pleasure.
“What I try to do is to get the things I can have fun with,”
he wrote to a print seller in the 1930s.

Several recurring themes appear in the satirical prints that interested
Fry, says Wheeler. “One is the ineffectiveness of the doctor. …
Another is the cost of medicine. What you also see in the satirical prints
is people making fun of pain—laughing at the pain of illness and
the pain of therapy.”

Although Fry collected works by Rembrandt and Hogarth, artistic
merit alone wouldn’t justify a place in his collection. He wanted
prints that depicted the history of medicine. For example, Anatomical
Theatre at Leiden, shows more than a dozen well-dressed men and women
wandering through the dissection hall. The rare 1610 engraving by W. Swanenburg
demonstrates that educated people of the early 17th century were fascinated
by anatomy.

Fry’s spirit lives on in the library’s continuing effort
to keep the collection current.

“The collection is a living collection,” says Wheeler.

Cathy Shufro is a contributing editor of Yale Medicine.

A boxed set of 10 note cards representing five satirical prints from
the Fry collection is for sale for $10 at the medical library circulation
desk. The cards can be ordered by mail for $12 per box by telephoning
the library at 203-785-5352.
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