169 results filtered with: Pictures, Digital Images
- Pictures
Franz Joseph Gall leading a discussion on phrenology with five colleagues, among his extensive collection of skulls and model heads. Coloured etching by T. Rowlandson, 1808.
Rowlandson, Thomas, 1756-1827.Date: 1808Reference: 11834i- Pictures
Elements of phrenology, physiognomy and palmistry, with diagrams of heads and hands, and portraits of historical figures. Colour lithograph, 1866.
Date: [1866]Reference: 28593iPart of: Encyclopédie Bouasse-Lebel- Pictures
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A man with a large, protruding head walking with a heavy gait; illustrating the reflective faculty in phrenology. Steel engraving by A. Devrits, 1847, after H. Bruyères.
Bruyères, Hippolyte.Date: [1847]Reference: 27624i- Pictures
Elements of phrenology, physiognomy and palmistry, with diagrams of heads and hands, and portraits of historical figures. Colour lithograph, late 19th century.
Date: [between 1800 and 1899]Reference: 662788i- Pictures
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The brain seen from the underside, sectioned horizontally; with attention to the part associated by Hollander's system of phrenology with memory for numbers. Process print, 1901, after etching, 1809.
Date: 1901Reference: 28017i- Pictures
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The devil examining the head of a boy; three other boys lurk under the devil's wings; frontispiece to a manual on phrenology. Steel engraving by J.D. Nargeot, 1847, after H. Bruyères.
Bruyères, Hippolyte.Date: [1847]Reference: 27612i- Pictures
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An introverted and an extroverted man; exhibiting excessive and lacking propensities connected with the faculty of causality (reflective thought) in phrenology. Steel engraving by E. Monnin, 1847, after H. Bruyères.
Bruyères, Hippolyte.Date: [1847]Reference: 27621i- Pictures
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Men of opposing social classes in a game of boules; illustrating the faculty of weight and resistance in phrenology. Steel engraving by A. Portier, 1847, after H. Bruyères.
Bruyères, Hippolyte.Date: [1847]Reference: 27623i- Pictures
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A woman in evening dress, attended by a man; the woman representing the 'sentiment' of self esteem, a 'faculty' according to phrenology. Steel engraving by J-I-L. Desjardins, 1847, after H. Bruyères.
Bruyères, Hippolyte.Date: [1847]Reference: 27618i- Pictures
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In a crowded salon, a wigmaker fits wigs according to occupation; representing the character stereotyping of Gall's phrenology. Coloured etching by J.E. Marcus after J. Smies, c. 1810.
Smies, Jacob, 1764-1833.Reference: 17678i- Pictures
The brain seen from the underside, sectioned horizontally; with attention to the parts associated by Hollander's system of phrenology with the faculties of external perception and its memory. Process print, 1901, after etching, 1809.
Date: 1901Reference: 28018i- Pictures
Portraits of people with phrenological interpretations. Engravings, lithographs etc., with text by Joseph Marriott, 1850.
Marriott, Joseph, active approximately 1850.Date: 1850Reference: 584990i- Pictures
Phrenological chart, with list of 35 faculties. Wood engraving with letterpress, written by E.T. Craig, 1836.
Craig, Edward Thomas, 1804-1894.Date: 1836Reference: 27747i- Pictures
Franz Joseph Gall. Lithograph by C. Motte after C. Carloni, 1826.
Date: 1826Reference: 559945iPart of: British Phrenological Society- Pictures
Phrenological propensities: adhesiveness, inhabitiveness, constructiveness, combativeness, destructiveness; illustrated by a couple stuck in a bog, a snail in its shell, a spider in its web, a huge brawl, a bull in a china shop. Etching by G. Cruikshank, 1826.
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878.Date: August 1st 1826Reference: 11840iPart of: Phrenological illustrations, or an artist's view of the craniological system of doctors Gall and Spurzheim- Pictures
- Online
Phrenological chart; with design of head containing symbols of the phrenological 'faculties'. Etching after O.S. Fowler (?).
Fowler, O. S. (Orson Squire), 1809-1887.Reference: 28451i- Pictures
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A head containing over thirty images symbolising the phrenological faculties. Wood engraving, c. 1845, after O.S. Fowler (?).
Fowler, O. S. (Orson Squire), 1809-1887.Date: [between 1840 and 1849?]Reference: 27753i- Pictures
A head containing over thirty images symbolising the phrenological faculties, accompanied by a key. Coloured lithograph, c. 1875, after O.S. Fowler (?).
Fowler, O. S. (Orson Squire), 1809-1887.Reference: 28595i- Pictures
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Three vignettes of phrenological heads and two phrenological propensities, amativeness and self love. Wood engraving by Dellagana after G. Cruikshank.
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878.Reference: 11850i- Pictures
A skull with phrenological markings placed next to a shrunken head. Photograph.
Date: 1920-1929Reference: 663253i- Pictures
George Combe. Photograph of an engraving.
Reference: 560056iPart of: British Phrenological Society- Pictures
- Online
A young woman's wig and hat being swept away by a gust of wind; behind her a young man is laughing, to the left stand an amused couple. Engraving by J. Caldwell, 1771, after J. Collet.
Collet, John, 1725?-1780.Date: 2 April 1771Reference: 31644i- Pictures
Phrenological properties of drawing: colour, form, space, order. Etching by G. Cruikshank, 1826.
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878.Date: August 1st 1826Reference: 11845iPart of: Phrenological illustrations, or an artist's view of the craniological system of doctors Gall and Spurzheim- Pictures
- Online
Bazile and Bartolo, characters from a story by Beaumarchais, representing the phrenological 'propensity' of secretiveness. Steel engraving by Geoffroy, 1847, after H. Bruyères.
Bruyères, Hippolyte.Date: [1847]Reference: 27616i- Pictures
A phrenologist working on the head of a boy. Watercolour painting by J. Leech.
Leech, John, 1817-1864.Reference: 27552i