Osler Wall Portraits

Osler Wall Portraits

 

Osler Wall Portraits


Ten portraits hanging in a grid, arranged in two rows of three and one of four on the bottom. The portraits are different sizes, in different styles and frames.

Modern and contemporary portrait personalities

The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) owns a diverse collection of 19th–21st century portraits. This selection shows how prominent figures in medicine have chosen to be painted in increasingly modern styles. 

Faces of medicine

From women presidents and RCP officers to a World War II colonel, the personalities here all contributed to the world of medicine today. Their achievements include reducing health inequalities, lobbying for women to become fellows, and challenging the gender pay gap.

Power vs personality       

The RCP continues to commission portraits of its presidents – several are on display here. In contrast to earlier presidential portraits, these later ones often present individuality over prestige. Symbols of authority and ceremony are replaced by informal compositions and objects which reveal the sitter’s personality beyond their role as physician: a Nobel Peace Prize winner, an accomplished pianist, a lover of the outdoors and a friend to artists.

Portrait of Professor Dame Carol Black by Jeff Stultiens. Head and shoulders portrait of a woman with short dark hair looking at the viewer. She wears a black and white striped jacket over a dark shirt.
Professor Dame Carol Black
Portrait of Professor George Alberti by June Mendoza. Half length portrait of a man in a suit and tie, sitting back in a relaxed posture. A blue backpack on his left and a landscape visible behind him.
Professor George Alberti
Three quarter length portrait of an older white man with short white-grey hair against a dark background. He stands in profile, looking left, wearing a dark suit and holding his arms crossed on his chest.
Sir Richard Quain

Professor Dame Carol Black

Portrait of Carol Black. An older white woman with short brown hair sits in an armchair looking at the viewer with a slight smile. Her arms are on the armrests and she wears a black and white vertically striped blazer over a dark top and trousers. She wears silver toned jewellery.

Professor Dame Carol Black (b.1939) 

Oil on canvas by Jeff Stultiens, 2006

 

Since the 1940s, the RCP has commissioned portraits of every outgoing president. Professor Dame Carol Black was only the second woman president of the RCP (2002–6), but she chose not to wear the traditional robes of office for her portrait. In a 2006 interview with the RCP’s curator, Black explained that:

‘I tried to professionalise and modernise the College, so there didn’t seem any point in being dressed up ... I think it has captured some aspects of leadership ... The important thing for me was to have an image that was of a modern woman holding a pretty major job.’

Black pursued an academic career in rheumatology and was medical director of the Royal Free Hospital. She has advised the government on health and work, and has been principal of Newnham College, Cambridge, since 2012. As RCP president, Black was concerned with how women doctors could achieve a balance between their work and family life. Today she regularly speaks about women and leadership.

Black chose the artist Jeff Stultiens (b.1944) to paint her. Stultiens is a member of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters, and has painted many notable people including HM Queen Elizabeth II.

Professor George Alberti

Portrait of Professor Alberti. An older white man with short grey hair in a suit and tie sits in a relaxed posture, legs crossed. With his left hand he holds a blue backpack. Trees and a hilly landscape can be seen behind him.Professor Sir George Alberti (b.1937)

Oil on canvas by June Mendoza, 2002

 

When RCP president Professor Sir George Alberti sat for his presidential portrait in 2002, he wanted the viewer to appreciate a different aspect of his life: his love of the outdoors. The president’s traditional symbols of authority – the caduceus, mace and robes – have been replaced by a backpack and a countryside view.

Alberti has worked extensively on diabetes, writing numerous research papers and serving on many national and international committees. In the 1970s, he pioneered the management of diabetic ketoacidosis, a serious metabolic emergency for sufferers of severe insulin deficiency.

Alberti was dean of medicine at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1985–2002), and professor of metabolic medicine at Imperial College London (1999–2002). More recently, he served as national clinical director for emergency access (2002–9), making significant changes to emergency care in the UK.

 

Australian artist June Mendoza OBE (b.1924) has painted royalty, prime ministers, sports personalities and celebrities. She is a member of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters and the Royal Institute of Oil Painters.

Lord Robert Platt

Three quarter length portrait of an older white man with short white-grey hair against a dark background. He stands in profile, looking left, wearing a dark suit and holding his arms crossed on his chest.

Sir Richard Quain (1816–1898)

Oil on canvas by John Millais, 1896

 

Irish doctor Sir Richard Quain's obituary mentions the ‘good humoured geniality that he showed to patients and friends’. These friends included the artists John Millais and Daniel Maclise who painted him during his lifetime, as well as the artist and sculptor Edwin Landseer, and Charles Dickens.

Quain graduated from University College London in 1840 and eventually became consulting physician at the Brompton Hospital for Diseases of the Chest. He received gold medal for achievements in physiology and comparative anatomy, attended prime minister Benjamin Disraeli during his final days, and became physician-extraordinary to Queen Victoria.

A member of many societies, including the Royal Society, Royal Statistical Society and the Harveian Society of London (of which he was president), Quain also held several senior officer positions at the RCP, but narrowly missed election as president in 1888.

Quain's portrait is a side profile, with his arms folded and head held in a thoughtful pose. It is not the typical power stance of a successful doctor with such high-profile appointments. Perhaps Millais wanted to capture the scholarly character of Quain, who is perhaps best remembered for editing the seminal 1882 Dictionary of Medicine

Dorothy Christian Hare, an older woman dressed in orange and purple robes looks down at the viewer.
Dorothy Christian Hare
Portrait of Jane Dacre, head and shoulders, hair in a dark bob, a chunky necklace over a black and white top under a blazer. The background is dark teal.
Professor Dame Jane Dacre
A man standing in a doorway wearing blue scrubs, arms crossed in front of him, a lanyard and stethoscope around his neck.
Sir Andrew Goddard

Dorothy Christian Hare

Portrait of Dorothy Hare, three quarter length, seated, wearing orange and purple academic robes and hat. Her hands are clasped in her lap and an art deco style building is visible behind her.

Dorothy Christian Hare (1876–1967)

Oil on canvas by Frederick Whicker, c.1955

 

Painted in striking academic robes of orange and purple, the RCP’s third female fellow Dorothy Hare looks down upon the viewer in an imposing and authoritative way.

Behind her looms Senate House, the administrative centre of the University of London. Hare studied medicine at the London School of Medicine for Women (LSMW), which by the time she graduated in 1905 had become part of the University of London.

During her career Hare held positions at the Royal Free Hospital, and the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital, London. At the request of Louisa Aldrich-Blake, dean of the LSMW, Hare sailed to Malta in 1916 to serve with the Royal Army Medical Corps. Two years later she became general medical director of the Women’s Royal Naval Service, the ‘Wrens’, and received a CBE in 1919. Hare was elected fellow of the RCP in 1936. She retired the following year to travel with her partner, another distinguished doctor, Elizabeth Herdman Lepper (1883–1971).

While working with the Wrens, Hare witnessed the suffering of many women with venereal diseases. She went on to found two hostels for affected women, including pregnant women who were refused care by mother and baby homes. 

 

Professor Dame Jane Dacre

Portrait of Professor Jane Dacre, standing, three quarter length. Dacre stands slightly left of centre, looking out of the portrait. Her hands are clasped in front of her on top of a black and white banded dress. She wears a black jacket and a chunky orange toned necklace. She is smiling slightly and her hair is in a dark bob. The background is dark teal, with a small RCP crest in the upper right side.

Professor Dame Jane Dacre (b.1955)

Oil on canvas by Paul Benney, 2018

 

Paul Benney’s painting marks the end of Professor Dame Jane Dacre’s RCP presidency in September 2018. Benney drew inspiration from the works of the 16th century portrait painter Hans Holbein the Younger. This is evident in Dacre’s pose, with her hands clasped in front, and the use of a single, richly-pigmented colour in the background.

After training at University College Hospital Medical School, Dacre undertook research and training in general internal medicine and rheumatology at St Bartholomew’s Hospital and Medical College, graduating with a postgraduate MD in 1992.

Dacre has devoted much of her career to the training and assessment of doctors. She was medical director of the membership of the RCP (MRCP) examination, and also chair of the General Medical Council’s Education and Training Committee, 2008–12. She served as director of UCL Medical School until her election as RCP president in 2014.

Dacre has worked to support diversity in the medical workforce, with an interest in how gender and ethnicity can affect career paths. In 2009 she chaired the research group which published the report Women and Medicine: The Future. As of 2018 she has lead a review into the gender pay gap in the NHS.

 

Sir Andrew Goddard

A man with sort brown hair standing in a doorway wearing blue scrubs, arms crossed in front of him, a lanyard and stethoscope around his neck.

Sir Andrew Goddard (b.1967)

Oil on canvas by Paul Brason, 2022

 

Wearing scrubs and a stethoscope, consultant gastroenterologist Sir Andrew Goddard stands in the doorway of his secretary’s office at the Royal Derby Hospital. Goddard continued with acute clinical practice while in office as RCP president (2018–2022), during which time the COVID-19 pandemic caused many physicians to return to wearing scrubs. No other portrait in the RCP collection shows a practising doctor in a clinical setting in this way.

After gaining an MD from Cambridge University, Goddard trained in Nottingham and was appointed as a consultant physician and gastroenterologist in Derby in 2001. His main clinical and research interests are bowel cancer screening, H. pylori (a bacterial stomach infection), iron deficiency anaemia and inflammatory bowel disease.

In 2018 Goddard became the youngest RCP president in more than 400 years, and the first from the East Midlands. This portrait is the latest example of the RCP’s modern tradition of commissioning portraits of its outgoing presidents.

Portrait of Albert Schweitzer, a man with white hair and a bushy moustache in a white shirt.
Albert Schweitzer
Portrait of Nigel Dean Compston, painted in broad strokes, a slightly balding man with glasses and a dark suit.
Nigel Dean Compston
Arthur George Phear, a balding man in profile in a brown suit.
Arthur George Phear
Portrait of Sir Douglas Andrew Kilgour Black, a balding man in small black glasses in a shirt and tie looking at the viewer.
Sir Douglas Andrew Kilgour Black

Albert Schweitzer

Portrait of Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965), half length, standing, Scheitwe has mid-lenght white hair and a bushy moustache, he stands slightly turned to the right, hands clasped over a book in front of him. He wears a white lab coat, an landscape with a river is visible behind him.

Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965)

Oil on canvas by Felix Szczesny Kwarta, 1953 

 

Alsatian-German Albert Schweitzer began his career as a theology student at the University of Strasbourg and a preacher. He also built a distinguished musical career as a renowned concert organist.

Performing enabled Schweitzer to self-fund his later medical degree, which he began at the age of 30. After qualifying in 1913, he funded the building of a hospital in Lambaréné, French Equatorial Africa (present-day Gabon), where he worked as a medical missionary.

After a year spent as a prisoner of war in France (1917–18), and several years travelling, preaching, lecturing and writing in Europe, Schweitzer settled in Lambaréné in 1924. He funded the expansion of his hospital to over 70 buildings, with a capacity for 500 patients.

At Lambaréné Schweitzer was a doctor and surgeon, a pastor, a village administrator, a superintendent of buildings, a writer and a musician. He received countless honours and honorary doctorates, and in 1952 won the Nobel Peace Prize for his life’s work. With the prize money he built a hospital at Lambaréné for people with leprosy.

Felix Szczesny Kwarta has represented Schweitzer in the typical attire of his most well-known role – the white coat of a doctor. Behind him are the plains of French Equatorial Africa.

Nigel Dean Compston

Portrait of Nigel Dean Compston (1918-1986) by Howard Morgan. Compston is painted in broad strokes, seated behind a desk or table, in front of him is a white landline phone and other objects. He is an older man, balding, wearing square glasses and a dark suit and tie, with a light, perhaps pink, shirt. The background is undefined, almost abstract.

Nigel Dean Compston (1918–1986)

Oil on canvas by Howard Morgan, 1985

 

Nigel Compston was a very popular physician and an exceptional administrator – perhaps this is why he was painted sitting behind his desk. He made a considerable impact during his 15 years as treasurer of the RCP.

After gaining his MD and passing the MRCP in the same year, Compston joined the British Army. By the end of World War II he was a lieutenant colonel responsible for the health of the British garrison in Berlin.

In 1948 Compston returned to Middlesex Hospital as a research fellow and later assistant professor. His work focused on multiple sclerosis, a subject which he later jointly authored a book on.

Compston was appointed consultant physician at the Royal Free Hospital in 1954, where he worked until retirement. He was highly regarded by his colleagues, students and patients. He oversaw the move of the hospital from Gray’s Inn Road to Pond Street, Hampstead, where there is a ward named after him.

In 1957 Compston became a fellow of the RCP. From 1970–85 he served as treasurer, working hard to secure the RCP’s finances. He initiated public appeals for funds, and purchased the leases for the conversion of the terraced houses in St Andrews Place.

Arthur George Phear

Arthur George Phear (1867-1959) by Muriel Jackson, Phear sits at a piano, music open in from of him. He is pictured in profile facing left, ft, looking at the keys before him. He is an older balding mand with grey hair and a grey mustache.

Arthur George Phear (1887–1959)

Tempera on board by Muriel Jackson, date unknown

 

Physician Arthur Phear was an accomplished pianist and organist. He was painted by the artist and wood engraver Muriel Jackson at his clavichord, which had been made especially for him by the famous instrument makers, the Dolmetsch family of Haslemere.  

While serving as councillor for the RCP, Phear helped change the bye-law which excluded women as fellows from the RCP. The decision to admit women was reached in 1925, and the motion was passed by 20 votes to 12. In 1907 Phear said that ‘every woman member ought to be able to look forward to being a fellow’.

Phear worked at several London hospitals during his career, including the Metropolitan Hospital, the Royal Free Hospital, the Royal Chest Hospital and the Queen Alexandra Military Hospital.

During the First World War, Phear was a consulting physician to the British Salonika Forces and the Army of the Black Sea. He was awarded the CB in 1919 for his dedication to his work, which he carried out despite frequent malaria and typhoid epidemics in the region.

Phear was also examiner in medicine for the Universities of London and Cambridge. He was a very popular teacher, and organised and conducted many concerts and performances by the Students’ Choral Society during his time at the Royal Free Hospital.

Sir Douglas Andrew Kilgour Black

Portrait of Sir Douglas Kilgour BlackSir Douglas Andrew Kilgour Black (1913–2002)     

Oil on canvas by Richard Foster, 1983

 

Douglas Black was chief scientist to the Department of Health (DoH) from 1973–7, and president of the RCP from 1977–83. He is best known for his influential 1980 report for the DOH, known as The Black report, which found that social deprivation was a significant reason for health inequality in the UK.

Black studied medicine at St Andrews University before working at Dundee Royal Infirmary. In 1942 he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps and was posted to Sierra Leone and India. When he returned to England in 1946 he became lecturer and later professor of medicine at Manchester University.

Black’s long-standing medical interest was nephrology – the specialty concerned with the kidneys. He made contributions to the treatment of renal failure, and co-wrote a study on the effects of potassium depletion in cell metabolism.    

Black was the last male RCP president to be represented in the presidential robes. The formality of the portrait, with Black’s attentive pose and the dark, sombre colours, are perhaps an appropriate choice considering the gravity of his findings published in The Black report.