![Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration in: Journal of Neurosurgery Volume 115 Issue 1 (2011) Journals Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration in: Journal of Neurosurgery Volume 115 Issue 1 (2011) Journals](https://thejns.org/view/journals/j-neurosurg/115/1/jns101094f5.jpg)
Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration in: Journal of Neurosurgery Volume 115 Issue 1 (2011) Journals
Medical illustration of the temporal bone cross-section by Max Brödel in 1939 with his unique carbon dust technique. No wonder he is considered the father of medical illustration 🧠 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Brödel Neurosurgery, Vol.
![Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration in: Journal of Neurosurgery Volume 115 Issue 1 (2011) Journals Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration in: Journal of Neurosurgery Volume 115 Issue 1 (2011) Journals](https://thejns.org/view/journals/j-neurosurg/115/1/jns101094f7.jpg)
Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration in: Journal of Neurosurgery Volume 115 Issue 1 (2011) Journals
![Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration. | Semantic Scholar Max Brödel: his art, legacy, and contributions to neurosurgery through medical illustration. | Semantic Scholar](https://d3i71xaburhd42.cloudfront.net/9db5749b88a1f90c71f1a3231bb77d097d1812ea/4-Figure3-1.png)