Teaching watercolor of microscopic view of scirrhous breast neoplasms
Dublin Core
Title
Teaching watercolor of microscopic view of scirrhous breast neoplasms
Subject
Adenocarcinoma, Scirrhous
Breast Neoplasms
Histology
Neoplasms
John Collins Warren Watercolor Collection
Kaula, William J.
Teaching Aids and devices
Teaching Methods
Warren, John Collins, 1842-1927
Harvard Medical School. Department of Anatomy
Abstract
Large watercolor of a microscopic view of cells from scirrhous cancer in the breast. Watercolor painted in shades of pink and purple. Most of watercolor is a low power microscopic view, with a small section in the right showing a high power microscopic view.
Creator
Kaula, William J.
Date Created
1896
Rights
The Harvard Medical Library does not hold copyright on all the materials in the collection. For use information, contact the Warren Anatomical Museum Curator at chm@hms.harvard.edu
Access Rights
Accessing collections in the Warren Anatomical Museum and the Warren Anatomical Museum archive requires advanced notice. Please submit a request to Public Services at chm@hms.harvard.edu to access the displayed item
Is Part Of
Warren Anatomical Museum (21142.275)
Is Referenced By
Warren Anatomical Museum Records, 1835-2010 (inclusive), 1971-1991 (bulk). Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Box 32, Folder 27
Manuscript catalogue of the Warren Museum, Canavan Accession Log, Unprocessed
Format
image
Medium
watercolors (paintings)
Identifier
21142.275
Provenance
The watercolor was painted by William J. Kaula in 1896 for John Collins Warren to use in teaching. The watercolor was left in the Harvard Medical School Department of Anatomy after Warren's death in 1927. The Department donated the watercolors to the Warren Anatomical Museum on 05/02/1929.
Still Image Item Type Metadata
Physical Dimensions
102 W x 69 H cm
Files
Citation
Kaula, William J., “Teaching watercolor of microscopic view of scirrhous breast neoplasms,” OnView, accessed April 19, 2024, https://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/items/show/13366.