Marie Marguerite Bihéron

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Marie Marguerite Bihéron (17 November 1719 – 18 June 1795

wax figure models
.

Biography

Bihéron was the daughter of a French

Madeleine Basseporte, of whom little is known outside of her anatomical drawings, and the memoirs of contemporaries.[2]

To procure bodies for her anatomical studies, Bihéron was forced to have them stolen from the military.

Her models achieved international renown, both because of their great anatomical accuracy and lifelikeness, and because she apparently had a method of making wax models that did not melt. Jakob Jonas Björnståhl wrote to Carl Linnaeus, that:

Björnståhl has witnessed an anatomical miracle. Marie Catherine Biheron[+] makes models of parts of the body that are absolutely lifelike. And they do not break. She does not reveal what material they are made of, although it seems as if they were made of wax mixed with something. All parts are correctly named in Latin and Greek. She has studied this art for more than 20 years. The King of Denmark
Christian VII is one of her customers. She sends her respects to Linnaeus.[7]

Because the Academie did not support women, Bihéron had to earn a living privately, by exhibiting and selling her models, as well as by teaching.

Diderot was also apparently one of her anatomy students.[3]

Bihéron also earned money by selling her models. The King of Denmark was one customer, and

Empress Catherine II of Russia another; the latter purchasing Bihéron's complete set of anatomical models.[6] Exhibitions included a 1761 exhibition, advertised by her pamphlet "Artificial Anatomy", proposing to show the body in "greatest precision", including internal organs, which could be manipulated—Bihéron permitted viewing at her home on the Vieille Estrapade near the Rue des Poules, beginning on 13 May 1761, and continued for some time.[3]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ According to Georges Boulinier: Une femme anatomiste au siècle des Lumières: Marie Marguerite Biheron (1719-1795). Histoire des Sciences médicales - vol. XXXV,4,411-423 (2001), p. 413, referring to a file (shelf mark V3E/D 118) retrievable online from the Archives de Paris, she died in Paris on 30 prairial An III, i.e., 18 June 1795. Boulinier's paper includes additional evidence to support that date.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Londa L. Schiebinger (1991), The Mind Has No Sex? Women in the Origins of Modern Science, pp.27-30.
  3. ^ a b c Andrew Cunningham, The Anatomist Anatomis'd: An Experimental Discipline in Enlightenment Europe, Ashgate Publishing, 2010, p.
  4. ^ Louis Prudhomme, 1830s, cited by Schiebinger, p.28.
  5. ^ a b c Autumn Stanley, Mothers and Daughters of Invention: Notes for Revised History of Technology, Rutgers University Press, 1995.
  6. ^ a b c d June K. Burton (2007), Napoleon and the Woman Question: Discourses of the Other Sex in French Education, Medicine, and Medical Law, 1799-1815, Texas Tech University Press (2007), pp.81-82.
  7. Jacob Jonas Björnståhl, to Carl Linnaeus
    .

External links