Creating a Smile: From 16th Century Canvas to 21st Century Reconstruction
Join us at the Triton Museum this November for another Triton Talk lecture, exploring the interface of Art and Anatomy.
Date and time
Location
Triton Museum of Art
1505 Warburton Avenue Santa Clara, CA 95050Good to know
Highlights
- 1 hour
- In person
About this event
The smile is critical to the expression of human emotion. In this Triton Talk and scientific lecture, Dr. James Chang, the Johnson & Johnson Distinguished Professor of Surgery at Stanford, will discuss the portrayal of the smile in portraiture and then delve into the anatomic basis of the smile. He will show methods to reconstruct the smile using microsurgical reconstruction.
(Please note: this lecture will include graphic examples of surgery.)
Free parking is included, as well as refreshments and light snacks.
Questions? Please contact education@tritonmuseum.org
Speaker Biography:
Dr. James Chang is currently the Johnson and Johnson Distinguished Professor and Chief of the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Stanford University.
Dr. Chang graduated from Stanford University with a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences with joint degrees in Biology and Economics. He spent a year with Volunteers in Asia as a lecturer in English at the Beijing University of Science and Technology in Beijing, People’s Republic of China. Following this, he graduated from Yale Medical School with Alpha Omega Alpha and Cum Laude honors. From 1991 to 1993, he was a Sarnoff Laboratory Research Fellow at the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center. He then completed a residency in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Stanford University Medical Center and a Hand and Microsurgery Fellowship at UCLA Medical Center.
He has spent the majority of his career at Stanford where he is currently Professor of Plastic Surgery and Orthopedic Surgery at Stanford University Medical Center. He is also an Attending Surgeon at Lucile Salter Packard Children’s Hospital.
His laboratory work involves translating tissue engineering concepts to reconstruction of tendon and bone in mutilated extremities. His clinical work focuses on complex microsurgical reconstruction of the hand. Dr. Chang is the Hand Surgery volume editor for Converse’s Plastic Surgery, the authoritative six-volume textbook. He was the Royal College of Surgeons Foundation traveling fellow and was awarded the 2006 Sterling Bunnell Traveling Fellowship by the ASSH. Dr. Chang was the Vice-Chair of the Plastic Surgery Residency Review Committee of the ACGME and a Secretary/Treasurer of the American Board of Plastic Surgery. In these positions, Dr. Chang has been very involved in the training and certification of plastic surgeons and hand surgeons on the national level. He was elected to the American Surgical Association in 2010. In 2018, Dr. Chang was President of the American Society for Surgery of the Hand. Recently, he was honored with the American Association of Plastic Surgeons Research Achievement Award. Dr. Chang teaches at Stanford on many levels. His popular sophomore seminar, Surgical Anatomy of the Hand: From Rodin to Reconstruction, is the focal point of an exhibit at the Cantor Art Center in 2014. He has directly mentored over 60 Stanford medical students and is very involved in the training of plastic surgery residents and hand fellows. As CMO of ReSurge International (formerly Interplast), Dr. Chang manages the service and educational programs of this charitable organization that delivers reconstructive surgery to the underserved throughout the world. He is married to Dr. Harriet Walker Roeder, a psychiatrist. They live on Stanford campus and have three daughters, Julia, Kathleen, and Cecilia. In his spare time, Jim enjoys traveling, flyfishing, cycling, watching baseball, and drinking his friends’ expensive wines.
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