Gangrenous left foot of a 77-year old woman with occluded arteries, showing swelling, discolouring and decomposition of skin around nails: anterior and posterior detail views. Watercolour by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1949.

  • Nicholson, Barbara
Date:
1949
Reference:
33023i
Part of:
Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.
  • Pictures

About this work

Publication/Creation

Ashford, Middlesex, 1949.

Physical description

1 painting : watercolour, with gouache ; sheet 16 x 24.6 cm

Biographical note

Barbara Evelyn Nicholson (1906 – 1978) trained at the Royal College of Art, graduating in 1923. She began her artistic career as a medical illustrator and was a founder member of the Medical Artists Association, where she is recorded as serving on an exhibition committee in October 1949. By 1951, she had illustrated G.F. Gibberd, A short textbook of midwifery (2nd ed., London: J. & A. Churchill, 1941) and Philip Wiles, Essentials of orthopaedics (London: J. & A. Churchill, 1949). The Medical Artists Association records last list her, in 1951. In the 1950s her focus moved to botanical subjects and from the late 1950s – 1970s she was a prolific botanical illustrator.

Lettering

<...> aged 77, C3.16.3.49, Senile gangrene Lettering inscribed in pencil, typed accompanying note with patient history includes arteriogram results, details of amputation and progressive problem of clots extending above division into femoral, tibial and peroneal arteries, occlusion caused by atheroma and arteriosclerosis in all vessels Bears number: 140/1949

Creator/production credits

The watercolours and pen and ink drawings held by Wellcome Collection were painted by Barbara Nicholson at Ashford Hospital, Ashford, Middlesex, between 1946 and 1951, at the request of the surgeon Norman Matheson.

Reference

Wellcome Collection 33023i

Ownership note

Presented to the Wellcome Institute Library in 1987 by Ashford Postgraduate Medical Centre, as part of a collection of medical illustrations by Barbara E. Nicholson.

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

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