Covid-19 Virus with Jennifer Fairman

August 10, 2020

COVID-19: Visualizing a Moving Target with Jennifer Fairman

August 10, 2020

COVID-19: Visualizing a Moving Target (Jennifer Fairman, CMI and Associate Professor at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Art As Applied to Medicine Program)


Presenter: Jennifer Fairman is an Associate Professor at The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. She specializes in medical and scientific illustration for publication, patient education, animation, web, graphic & interactive design and small business practices. Her work has been published in over 960 scientific journal articles, textbooks and book chapters, monographs, science presentations, websites and videos. Her contributions are highly recognized by the Association of Medical Illustrators, Illustrators Club of DC, National Science Foundation, BioCommunications Association, James Smithson Society, and Vesalius Trust. She most recently graduated with her Master of Professional Studies in the Business of Art and Design from the Maryland Institute College of Art with perfect achievement. She was also named the Ratcliffe Foundation’s top grant winner of MICA’s third annual UP/Start Venture Competition.


Website: www.fairmanstudios.com/


Book cover Art - Little Beasts: Art, Wonder, and the Natural World
By - Review by Julianne Snider December 31, 2025
Little Beasts has abundant, detailed images and essays tracing European natural history’s evolution from the 15th–17th centuries. It highlights Flemish artists Joris Hoefnagel and Jan van Kessel’s influential work, showing how art helped document and disseminate knowledge of nature’s diversity during the Renaissance.
Journal of Nature Science Illustrators Vol. 57, No. 2: Front over image
By GNSI December 30, 2025
Welcome to the second edition of 2025! This issue highlights the breadth of contemporary natural science illustration—from personal sketchbook practice to anatomy education, climate-science communication, art history, and bioarchaeological reconstruction. Articles explore teaching comparative vertebrate anatomy online, creating effective climate visuals, understanding early natural-history illustration through a review of Little Beasts , and using illustration, genetics, and 3D modeling to reconstruct a medieval skull. Log into your account to view the Journal: JNSI 2025 Vol. 57, No. 2 Not yet a subscriber? To view the issue for free, become a GNSI member today!
Visuals s a Catalyst fro Climate Science Communications
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Visuals as a Catalyst for Climate Science Communication - Part 1 /July 15, 2025

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