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The Bigger Picture: Visual Archives and the Smithsonian

Archive: 03/2012

Truth and Beauty

by Ellen Alers on March 27, 2012

This is one of a series of posts written in celebration of Women's History Month, and profiling additions of new images of female scientists added to the Smithsonian Flickr Commons. We invite you to subscribe to The Bigger Picture blog and to the Smithsonian Flickr Commons feed to keep up with new posts and image additions.

Maud Slye (1879-1954) was a pathologist and noted cancer researcher at the University of Chicago. Smithsonian Institution Archives, Accession 90-105.

Maud Slye, (1879–1954), was a pathologist and tireless cancer researcher whose contributions to the role of genetics and cancer were game changing.

While at the University of Chicago working with Japanese "waltzing mice"—which suffer from a genetic neurologic disorder—Slye became interested in the link between genetic inheritance and disease expression. Her work with cancer, however, was prompted by what she was observing in her own lab mice and a report of cattle from the same ranch who all suffered from the same sort of cancer of the eye. Based on this report and additional scientific evidence, she set out to determine if there was a genetic link to explain why cancer developed in some animals and not in others.

Using her skill in breeding mice (her breeding records and charts are in the archives at the University of Chicago, she was able to develop strains of cancer-prone and cancer-resistant mice and reliably predict which pairings would develop cancer. Her success with the mouse model was compelling and challenged the long-held notion that cancer spread through a contagion. Her findings also led her to advocate for a comprehensive archive of human medical records to identify genetic weaknesses and help control cancer through healthy pairings. As she stated in a January 1937, Time article, "I breed out breast cancers. I don't think we should feel so hopeless about breeding out other types. Only romance stops us. It is the duty of scientists to ascertain and present facts. If the people prefer romance to taking advantage of these facts, there is nothing we can do about it." I bet Eugenicists loved that. But I digress…GOLD OF THE DAWN. (1934, June 11). Advocate (Burnie, Tas. : 1890 - 1954), p. 2. Retrieved March 23, 2012.

Although her exacting work answered some questions regarding why cancers run in families, it was criticized as overly simplistic and not fully appreciative of the complexity of extraneous factors that could also prompt the emergence of cancer. Nevertheless, there was more to Maud Slye than mice and cancer.

Like many scientists, Slye had an artistic and expressive side. Poetry may, on its face, appear to be at odds with her detailed statistical analysis of mouse heredity and cancer, but I think her propensity for it makes perfect sense. Good science and poetry require keen observation, analysis, interpretation, and persuasive presentation for success.

Her two books of poetry, Songs and Solaces (Stratford Co., 1934) and I the Wind: Symphony no. 1 and minor songs (Stratford Co., 1936) are not thin little volumes published by a vanity press. These are substantial works of several hundred pages each and were received well by critics. The poems (what snatches I’ve been able to find) are evocative, romantic, and linguistically rich.

Maud Slye was a complex women who managed to combine the pursuits of truth and beauty and succeeded at both.

Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: Women’s History Month, Science, Archive, Health/Medicine
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See Here: 3/26/2012

by The Bigger Picture on March 26, 2012

Smithsonian Secretaries and Clerks, 1930, by Unknown, 1930, Smithsonian Archives - History Div, 94-4431.

Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: See Here, Behind the Scenes
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See Here: 3/23/2012

by The Bigger Picture on March 23, 2012

Elephant House with Elephant Walking in the Yard, NZP,1903, by Unknown, Smithsonian Archives - History Div, 15533 or MAH-15533.

Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: See Here, Architecture
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Link Love: 3/23/2012

by Catherine Shteynberg on March 23, 2012

Francis Vandeveer Kughler in his studio with a model.

  • It’s so much fun looking through this recent blog post by the Smithsonian American Art Museum on artists posing with their models and artworks (example at right).
  • The Center for Civil War Photography has launched a guide to finding Civil War photos, with links to many sites featuring Civil War photography across the web.
  • The weather across the US has been unseasonably warm. Enjoy the early Spring in Washington, DC in one of the Smithsonian’s eleven gardens [via @smithsonian].
  • The Alan Lomax Archive and the Association for Cultural Equity (ACE) have officially launched the ACE Online Archive, which features a plethora of Lomax’s incredible folk music recordings in an online format that’s “browse-able, searchable, and stream-able from pretty much any computer” [via Marguerite Roby, SIA].
  • The National Gallery of Art in the US announces the launch of NGA Images—an online repository of digital images from their collections allowing users to search, browse, share, and download images believed to be in the public domain.
  • Smithsonian Magazine has just posted the answer from Smithsonian experts to the most recent “Ask Smithsonian” question: can birds be identified just from their feathers? Now it’s your turn to ask a question!: submit your “Ask Smithsonian” question on their website.

Categories: What Gets Saved
Tags: American History, Artist, Digitization, Entertainment, Link Love
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New Flickr Commons Set: Mary Agnes Chase Field Books

by Catherine Shteynberg on March 22, 2012

This is one of a series of posts written in celebration of Women's History Month, and profiling additions of new images of female scientists added to the Smithsonian Flickr Commons. We invite you to subscribe to The Bigger Picture blog and to the Smithsonian Flickr Commons feed to keep up with new posts and image additions.

The celebration of formidable women on the Smithsonian Flickr Commons in honor of Women’s History Month continues. Today, we profile a new set of images from the Smithsonian Institution Archives’ collections curated and added to the Flickr Commons by our partners at the Smithsonian’s Field Book Project.

This new set of images featured above, Mary Agnes Chase Field Books, consists of images that document the field work of Mary Agnes Chase (1869-1963) and her long time collaboration with fellow botanist Albert Spear Hitchcock. In addition to being a botanist, and the foremost grass expert during her time, Chase was a women’s rights advocate and activist, and was even arrested for her political activities.

We’ve written about Chase in the past and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History’s Anthropology Department has a great online profile of her. However, this Flickr set adds a wonderful visual perspective to Chase’s career, and her field work around Brazil, Mexico, and the US. Many thanks to the Field Book Project for curating this set, and hop on over to their blog and to the Mary Agnes Chase Field Books set for more details on Chase’s career.

Categories: Collections in Focus
Tags: American History, Flickr Commons, Science
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