Teachers, students, academics and the public can now download and use images depicting 2,000 years of mankind and medicine for free, thanks this newly launched website from the Wellcome Trust.
Launched on 15 June 2007, 'Wellcome Images' is the world's leading source of images on the history of medicine, modern biomedical science and clinical medicine. All content has been made available under a Creative Commons Licence, which allows users to copy, distribute and display the image, provided the source is fully attributed and it is used for non-commercial purposes.
Wellcome Images is constantly updated with new clinical, and biomedical and historical images from the Wellcome Library, Europe's leading resource for the study of history of medicine which recently re-launched as part of the new and forthcoming Wellcome Collection.
Everything from an oil painting of Florence Nightingale and a picture depicting Charles Darwin as an ape, to a photograph of Alexander Fleming in his laboratory are part of this unique collection. The images aid teachers and researchers keen to illustrate themes from medical and social history through to contemporary healthcare and biomedical science and to bring complex biomedical concepts to life. Catherine Draycott Head of Wellcome Images, explains:
"Wellcome Images is an invaluable tool for teachers and researchers of medical history, health, clinical and biomedical sciences. Through visuals users are able to develop a more profound understanding of human and animal biology, and can use them in their research and teaching. What is unusual for a picture library of this nature, is that the online service is completely free.
"A range of diverse industries currently use our images - including teachers, publishers, broadcasters and academics. By involving these user groups in developing this new site, we believe the enhanced interface will be easier and faster to use."
Professor Hal Cook, Director of The Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, comments:
"The Wellcome Library's collection of images which appear online are simply superb. Full of visual resources from antiquity to the present, from Chinese medicine to molecular models, from portraits of individual people to scenes of medical practice, it is an invaluable resource for teaching and research in the history of medicine and related subjects. The new website greatly facilitates viewing the images, making them more accessible: a big step forward in the Library's efforts to serve all the members of the public who have an interest in medicine's past."
Users of Wellcome Images will also be able to access the advice and expertise of professional picture researchers who are qualified scientists or historians. They can help users find images, provide background information, commission new images to be taken and provide access to high resolution images.
Wellcome Images, previously known as the Wellcome Trust Medical Photographic Library, will allow unlimited access to the vast catalogue of medical images, manuscripts, and illustrations exploring the meaning of medicine, its history and current practice.
Each year, the Wellcome Trust runs the Wellcome Images Awards (previously Biomedical Image Awards), recognising scientists and photographers who have contributed their own images to the website. The resulting public exhibition is extremely popular and attracts widespread media attention.
Media enquiries
Mike Findlay
T +44 (0)20 7611 8612
E m.findlay@wellcome.ac.uk
1. Creative Commons Licence
All Wellcome Images on the site are available under the Creative Commons Attribution, Non-commercial Licence 2.0 or, in the case of the contemporary images, Creative Commons Attribution, Non-Commercial, No Derivatives licences 2.0 for England & Wales. This means that users can download the images on the site and use them as long as they are fully attributed, used only for non-commercial purposes.
2. The Wellcome Trust is the largest charity in the UK. It funds innovative biomedical research, in the UK and internationally, spending around £500 million each year to support the brightest scientists with the best ideas. The Wellcome Trust supports public debate about biomedical research and its impact on health and wellbeing.
3. The Wellcome Library is an unrivaled resource for the study of the history of medicine, to collection includes: 700 000 books; a film and audio collection of 2500 titles; 600 archival collections; and more than 100 000 paintings, prints and photographs. Over 100,000 images in Wellcome Images have been sourced from the Library's collections. The Library is a part of Wellcome Collection.
4. The Wellcome Trust's former headquarters, the Wellcome Building on London's Euston Road, has been redesigned by Hopkins Architects to become a new £30 million public venue opening 21 June 2007. Free to all, Wellcome Collection explores the connections between medicine, life and art in the past, present and future. The building comprises three galleries, a public events space, the Wellcome Library, a café, a bookshop, conference facilities and a members' club.
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