58 results filtered with: Pictures
- Pictures
Effects of medical treatments. Coloured lithographs, ca. 1850.
Date: [between 1800 and 1899]Reference: 543737i- Pictures
- Online
James Rutherford Morison. Photograph.
Reference: 13254i- Pictures
- Online
Robert Morison (1620-1683), botanist. Oil painting.
Reference: 45877i- Pictures
- Online
James Morison. Coloured aquatint after H. Berthoud.
Berthoud, H.Reference: 7047i- Pictures
A sailor surviving in a large empty box of James Morison's pills, after being shipwrecked. Coloured lithograph.
Reference: 11856i- Pictures
Sir Thomas Morison Legge. Photograph by Graystone Bird.
Reference: 13055i- Pictures
James Morison. Stipple engraving by Castle after G. Clint, 1828.
Clint, George, 1770-1854.Reference: 7046i- Pictures
A black man buying some of J. Morison's pills, hoping they will make him white. Coloured lithograph.
Reference: 11858iPart of: Universal pills- Pictures
- Online
Robert Morison. Line engraving by R. White, 1680, after W. Sonmans.
Sonmans, William, -1708.Date: 1680Reference: 7048i- Pictures
- Online
James Rutherford Morison with his staff: four men and eleven women. Photograph, ca. 1900.
Date: [1900?]Reference: 560697i- Pictures
- Online
James Rutherford Morison with his staff: seven men and nine women. Photograph, ca. 1900.
Date: [1900?]Reference: 560688i- Pictures
A skeletal figure surveying three doctors around a cauldron, a parody of Macbeth and the three witches; promoting James Morison's alternative medicines. Lithograph.
Reference: 10765iPart of: Hygeian illustration- Pictures
An obese man exhibiting a placard of himself looking extremely thin, demonstrating the effectiveness of J. Morison's pills. Coloured lithograph.
Reference: 11857iPart of: Universal pills- Pictures
- Online
James Rutherford Morison with his staff: three men and ten women. Photograph, ca. 1900.
Date: [1900?]Reference: 560698i- Pictures
- Online
A woman diagnosed as suffering from melancholia. Lithograph, 1892, after a drawing made for Sir Alexander Morison.
Date: [1892]Reference: 38638i- Pictures
A horrified man discovering that as a result of taking J. Morison's vegetable pills, his nose has turned into a carrot. Coloured lithograph.
Reference: 11855iPart of: Universal pills- Pictures
- Online
A man diagnosed as suffering from acute dementia. Lithograph, 1892, after a drawing by Alexander Johnston, 1836/1841, for Sir Alexander Morison.
Johnston, Alexander, 1815-1891.Date: [1892]Reference: 38641i- Pictures
A person discovering that they have been transformed into several kinds of vegetables the morning after taking J. Morison's vegetable pills. Coloured lithograph.
Reference: 11851i- Pictures
- Online
A man diagnosed as suffering from melancholia with strong suicidal tendency. Lithograph, 1892, after a drawing by Alexander Johnston, 1837, for Sir Alexander Morison.
Johnston, Alexander, 1815-1891.Date: [1892]Reference: 38639i- Pictures
- Online
A woman diagnosed as suffering from melancholia with fear, or fear of everything, and with a propensity to attempt suicide. Lithograph, 1892, after a drawing made for Sir Alexander Morison.
Date: [1892]Reference: 38637i- Pictures
- Online
A man in bed with vegetables sprouting from all parts of his body; as a result of taking an overdose of James Morison's vegetable pills. Coloured lithograph by C.J. Grant, 1831.
Grant, C. J. (Charles Jameson), active 1830-1852.Date: 8 May 1831Reference: 11852iPart of: Grants oddities- Pictures
A horrified gouty man discovering grass is growing out of his skin, as a result of taking J. Morison's vegetable pills. Coloured lithograph by C.J. Grant, 1835.
Grant, C. J. (Charles Jameson), active 1830-1852.Date: 5 November 1835Reference: 11859iPart of: Dawson's magic- Pictures
A tramp exclaiming to another tramp that his severed legs have become whole again as a result of taking J. Morison's vegetable pills. Coloured lithograph by C.J. Grant, 1834.
Grant, C. J. (Charles Jameson), active 1830-1852.Date: 10 January 1834Reference: 11854iPart of: Grants oddities- Pictures
James Morison promoting his alternative medicines; satirised by five vignettes of a fox among geese. Etching by G. Cruikshank, 1833, after himself.
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878.Date: 1833Reference: 10764i- Pictures
Two trees being cultivated by doctors; symbolising the differences claimed by James Morison between the 'organic' and his 'hygeist' approached to health. Lithograph, c. 1835.
Reference: 18136i