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1 Department of Neurosurgery, James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough,
UK
2 Division of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Southampton, Southampton,
UK
3 West London Neurosciences Centre, Charing Cross Hospital, London, UK
4 Department of Radiology, James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough,
UK
Correspondence to: Mr Alessandro Paluzzi, 18 Collingham Drive, Nunthorpe, Middlesbrough TS7 0GB, UK Email: apaluzzi{at}doctors.org.uk
SUMMARY
During the Renaissance, a period of rebirth for humanities and science, new knowledge and speculation began to emerge about the function of the human body, replacing ancient religious and philosophical dogma. The brain must have been a fascinating mystery to a Renaissance artist, but some speculation existed at that time on the function of its parts. Here we show how revived interest in anatomy and life sciences may have influenced the figurative work of Italian and Flemish masters, such as Rafael, Michelangelo and David. We present a historical perspective on the artists and the period in which they lived, their fascination for human anatomy and its symbolic use in their art.
Prior to the 16th century, knowledge of the brain was limited and influenced in a dogmatic way by the teachings of Galen1 who, as we now know, conducted his anatomical studies not on humans but on animals.2 Nemesus, Bishop of Emesa, in around the year 400 was one of the first to attribute mental faculties to the brain, specifically to the ventricles. He identified two anterior (lateral) ventricles, to which he assigned perception, a middle ventricle responsible for cognition and a posterior ventricle for memory.2,3 After a long period of stasis in the Middle Ages, Renaissance scholars realized the importance of making direct observations on dissected cadavers. Between 1504 and 1507, Leonardo da Vinci conducted experiments to reveal the anatomy of the ventricular system in the brain. He injected hot wax through a tube thrust into the ventricular cavities of an ox and then scraped the overlying brain off, thus obtaining, in a simple but ingenious way, an accurate cast of the ventricles.2,4 Leonardo shared the belief promoted by scholarly Christians that the ventricles were the abode of rational soul.
We have several examples of hidden symbolism in Renaissance paintings, but the influence of phrenology and this rudimentary knowledge of neuroanatomy on artists of that period is under-recognized. In the absence of documentary or scientific evidence as to the real intentions of these painters, the notion of such commixture of sacred and profane remains speculative and probably controversial, but at the same time fascinating and provocative. Here we present three examples of Renaissance masterpieces where such symbolism may have been used, although probably many more exist. Conducting an artistic, philosophical and anatomical analysis of the paintings can be an intriguing exercise, but the interpretation will inevitably be conjectural.
RAFAEL'S TRANSFIGURATION OF JESUS
Clothed in snow-white garments, Christ seems, as he opens his arms and raises his head, to display the essence and godly nature of all three Persons of the Trinity, closely united in the perfection of Raphael's art.5
This painting combines two separate, though consecutive, episodes of the Gospels in the same picture: the Transfiguration of Christ on Mount Tabor and the Healing of the Boy with an Evil Spirit. Before Raphael these episodes had been represented in some cyclical illustrations, but never together in the same painting. Jesus appears to be surrounded by a circular or spherical cloud, into which the main figures are almost perfectly inserted. Everything in the painting seems to follow a geometrical order. The circle, however, is not symmetrical, being notched on the right hand side (Figure 1). This notch is the first feature that suggests that the cloud might have been modelled to a specific design. As we follow the contour of the cloud where the lines assume more definition, what seems to be just a cloud takes on a very peculiar shape.
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Elijah's silhouette has an astonishing similarity to the brain stem: the floating part of his garments on the right side neatly portrays the pons Varolii, whilst around and below his left arm the robe forms two folds that describe the superior and inferior colliculi of the quadrigeminal plate. The left side of his mantle continues down to a pointed edge that outlines the shape of the cerebral aqueduct and the fourth ventricle (coincidentally, the anatomical names for the posterior wall of these two structures are the superior and inferior medullary vela). Elijah's left leg continues as the bulb and the spinal cord. Jesus's contour follows the outer border of the lateral ventricles along the corpus callosum, while his robe spreads to the right, taking the shape of the third ventricle. Through the Holy Spirit, depicted as the brain, Jesus heals the lunatic boy. He gives back to the possessed boy his soul and, with it, his Reason.
GERARD DAVID'S TRANSFIGURATION OF CHRIST
Figure 3 shows how Gerard David's painting of the Transfiguration of Christ resembles a coronal section of the brain.
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MICHELANGELO'S CREATION OF ADAM
Raphael and Michelangelo, like Leonardo, performed numerous cadaver dissections to expand their perspective in sculpture and painting.5 More than fifteen years ago, Meshberger6 noted how the Creation of Adam represented in the Sistine chapel (Figure 4), shows God surrounded by a drape that has the shape of what he believed to be the sagittal section of a human brain.
Starting from God's hand and proceeding anticlockwise, it is possible to recognize a fold in the cape that would correspond to the Sylvian fissure; then the cherub's right thigh represents the optic nerve, the right knee the transacted optic chiasm and the right leg the optic tract. The same cherub's left bifid foot and leg take the shape of the pituitary gland with its stalk. The flowing green robe at the base corresponds to the vertebral artery as it describes a genu before entering the foramen magnum. The back of the angel below God represents the pons, while the angel's hip and leg continue as the spinal cord. The interpretation of this scene given by Meshberger is that God, in the process of creating Adam, gives him the gift of intellect, symbolized by the brain.6
CONCLUSION
We are not able to explain every feature of these masterpieces: we do not know how accurately the three artists sketched the brain in their studies on cadavers, if these ever took place, and how meticulous they intended to be with their anatomical detail. To some extent this is irrelevant: the Transfiguration of Christ and the Creation of Adam are not tables of an atlas of anatomy but works of art, and they need to obey aesthetic and geometrical rules first. Nor can we explain why the artists might have been drawn to the use of such hidden symbolism in their work: perhaps this was a tongue-in-cheek send-up of religious themes, unbeknownst to the commissioners of the paintings, or maybe just the product of a new philosophical climate where a revitalized passion for life sciences was permeating all aspects of society, including art.
Opinions amongst readers of this article will certainly vary, but we hope that this review will at least stimulate further scientific or scholarly contributions to this fascinating topic.
Footnotes
Competing interests None declared.
Ethical approval Not required.
Contributorship AP, AB and PB made the initial observations on the paintings. AP and AB wrote most of the article. LV did the drawings and literature search.
REFERENCES
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