“How Medicine Became Modern” exhibition opens at tech symposium Friday
You can put your hands directly on history starting this weekend at the Dittrick Medical History Center at ӰƵ. On Friday evening, the Dittrick Museum, on the third floor of the Allen Memorial Medical Library (11000 Euclid Ave.) on the ӰƵ campus, will debut its new “How Medicine Became Modern” digital exhibition wall. The 4-by-8-foot interactive touch-screen display previews the entire Dittrick collection through stories and images. “This exhibition reveals medicine does not exist in a vacuum, but reflects the values and dynamics of American society and culture,” said James Edmonson, the museum’s chief curator. “Visitors can explore how medical innovations—as embodied in the artifacts of the Dittrick Museum—forever altered the American experience of health and medicine.”Digitally experiencing history
Dittrick Curator Jim Edmonson demonstrates the interactive display
The new digital wall, similar to the in the Cleveland Museum of Art, features four interconnected touch screens that are as easy to use as a smartphone—responding to tapping, swiping or pinching.
The state-of-the-art system was designed by the award-winning , which has also done projects for the National WWII Museum and NASA Goddard Visitor Center.
Museum visitors will be able to interact with full-size images and stories about the medical past through three thematic entry points to history: Women's Health and Contraception, Communities in Crisis and the Spread of Ideas.
“This is interaction on a new level," said Brandy Schillace, the Dittrick Museum’s senior research associate and public engagement/programs fellow. “And the exhibition broadens perspectives by showing how the history of medicine influences and shapes practices in the present, while our digitized collections allow greater access to research and materials.”