Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Repaying Yale Medical School in art

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Repaying Yale Medical School in art

    The Yale Herald, CT
    Oct 27 2007


    Repaying Yale Medical School in art

    BY MATTHEW KOZLARK
    COURTESY YALE.EDU

    Outside of the Anlyan Medical Center, a modernist display of metal
    trees demonstrate the center's idea of art as happiness.

    John Anlyan was born to Armenian parents in Alexandria, Egypt in
    1939, and from an early age carried dreams of studying in the United
    States, where he hoped to become a surgeon. But when his overseas
    assets were frozen midway through his sophomore year in the chaos of
    World War I, Anlyan feared that he would not be able to continue at
    the University. Thanks to financial aid, though, Anlyan graduated
    from Yale College in 1942, and later from the Yale School of Medicine
    in 1945. After earning a master's degree in enzyme chemistry and
    teaching at Yale for two years, he moved with his wife, Betty, to San
    Francisco. There, he spent his days performing cancer surgery and his
    nights learning 10 languages, reading law, and oil painting.
    Throughout the later parts of his life, he hosted Yale presidents and
    deans at his opulent bay area house, and would come to be regarded as
    one of the university's chief donors.

    Throughout his 50 years in California, Anlyan regularly donated large
    sums to Yale. Yale held a special place in Anylan's family - both of
    his younger brothers also graduated from the Yale School of Medicine
    with University aid, in 1949 and 1951 respectively, and he felt that
    Yale's generosity had enabled his personal successes. Anlyan would
    spend the next 50 years trying to reward Yale for its assistance.

    In October of 1991, Anlyan pledged his entire estate - $25 million - to
    Yale University, much of which went to the medical school in what was
    the largest gift in the school's history. The medical school used the
    donation to spearhead its construction of what is now known as the
    Anlyan Center for Medical Research and Education, a
    457,000-square-foot complex that now occupies a city-block at the
    intersection of Howard Ave. and Gilbert St.

    In addition to his financial contributions, Anlyan also donated a
    series of his own oil paintings, studies of the Golden Gate Bridge
    and surrounding marine life to hang in the anatomy wing. `I think
    they'll make it a happier place,' Anlyan was quoted as saying in Yale
    Medicine.

    Today, in addition to the collection of oil paintings, the hallway
    outside the dissection room displays drawings, free verse poems,
    black and white photographs, and flower-shaped quilts. `Handed,' a
    pencil drawing by a member of the class of 2002 depicting hands
    passing a dodecahedron, is meant to symbolize the dual relationships
    between student and teacher in the ongoing transfer of human
    knowledge - a process that Anylan spent half a century trying to
    support for other students at the University.

    http://www.yaleherald.com/article.php ?Article=5850

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X