Honing the art of observation, and observing art
A new medical school course brings students to the Cantor Arts Center and Anderson Collection to practice close observation of art, and then learn how to translate those skills to a clinical setting.
Making the rounds
The clinical correlate hour of the course involves Stanford medical faculty members taking the lessons of the art gallery sessions and applying them to the clinical setting. (Each of the students also had the opportunity to go on rounds of a hospital ward with one of the participating physicians to apply their observation skills to real patients.) Topics of the course included narrative, body in motion, skin and tone, and death, with doctors from the fields of family medicine, orthopedics, dermatology, pathology and anesthesiology leading each session. “The thematic organization was meant to inspire conversation across disciplines, by putting two takes on a similar theme in proximity to each other for two hours,” said Lerman-Tan. “Bringing medicine into the space of the museum was a great aspect of the course — simply allowing different bodies of knowledge to exist under one roof. The medical students would sometimes use clinical vocabulary or concepts to describe works in the gallery, making for an interesting range of language in our discussions.”
Bringing medicine into the space of the museum was a great aspect of the course.
The clinical portion of the course drew Cartmell, but so too did the opportunity to see the treasures in the Cantor Center and the Anderson Collection. Two of those treasures, Lucifer (1947), by Jackson Pollock, and Red in Red (1955), by Sam Francis, in the Anderson collection, made Cartmell see how works of art “can be made up of numerous small elements, coming together to form a larger image, much like cells coming together to form an organ or tissue.” Interesting to many of the students was the story of Francis, one of the most acclaimed post-World War II painters in America. “Francis planned on becoming a doctor, but was injured in a training accident during World War II,” Naftalis said. The injury resulted in an extended stay in the hospital, where Francis was encouraged to apply his medical observation skills to painting.
Slowing down
One important takeaway for him from the course, Cartmell said, was learning to observe without jumping to interpretation. “I was surprised at how strong the impulse was to interpret the work, before I had actually observed the entire piece,” he said. The exercises the instructors led us through, describing what we saw objectively without commentary, really forced me to slow down and really see what was in front of me, without jumping to conclusions or interpretation.” During the session on death, pathologist Darren Salmi, MD, clinical assistant professor of anatomy and of pathology, demonstrated how jumping to conclusions can have dire consequences in the medical profession, where “no history is better than the wrong history” for a patient. Salmi cited cases of missed diagnosis because of medical observations that were made with partial information, saying that findings could be “hiding in plain sight.”
If medical students can grasp these observation skills, it will really serve them well in their residencies and beyond.
In one case, Salmi said, a patient with a history of heart disease was almost misdiagnosed because the focus of the clinical gaze was on the area of the abnormally enlarged heart, which drew attention away from a small cancerous mass in the lung. For the session on the body in motion, Annie Ronan, a graduate student in art history, led a conversation on Eadweard Muybridge photographs of men jumping — pictures of an anatomical and even pseudo-scientific nature. Art history graduate student Lexi Johnson then led a discussion about an Andy Warhol contact sheet (pulled from a collection of 3,624 contact sheets recently donated to the Cantor Center by the Warhol Foundation), in which Keith Haring and Juan Dubose are shown in a variety of poses. “The concept behind this class is so important,” Salmi said. “If medical students can grasp these observation skills, it will really serve them well in their residencies and beyond.”