Dr. Michael Salcman is an internationally known
neurological surgeon, poet and art critic. Born in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia in
1946, the son of Holocaust survivors, he came to the United States in
1949. He attended the Combined Program in
Liberal Arts and Medical Education at Boston University where he received both
the B.A. and M.D. in 1969, graduating first in his class. After a surgical
internship, he was a Fellow in Neurophysiology at the National Institutes of
Health from 1970 to 1972 and trained in neurological surgery at Columbia
University’s Neurological Institute in New York (1972-1976). He joined the
faculty at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1976 and served as
chairman of neurosurgery from 1984 through 1991. He was named a Distinguished
Alumnus of Columbia’s Neurological Institute in 1985 and of Boston University’s
School of Medicine in 2001. In 1991 he was elected President of the Congress of
Neurological Surgeons. He is the author of almost 200 medical and scientific
papers and the author or editor of six medical and scientific texts.
A past President of the Contemporary Museum in
Baltimore, Dr. Salcman lectures widely on the relationship between the arts and
sciences & the visual arts and the brain.
As Special Lecturer in the Osher Institute at Towson University he
regularly teaches History of Modern and Contemporary Art from 1800 to the
Present at Towson University, the Art Seminars Group, and the Osher Institute
at Johns Hopkins. Dr. Salcman has been
writing poetry for almost fifty years. His poems have been widely published in
such journals as Alaska Quarterly Review, Barrow Street, Harvard Review,
Hopkins Review, The Hudson Review, New Letters, New York Quarterly, Notre Dame
Review, The Ontario Review, Poet Lore, and Raritan. His work has been nominated
for six Pushcart Prizes and a Best of the Web Award, and his poems have
appeared on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily and in several anthologies.