By Tom
Savonick, Senior Medical Writer
If you visit our headquarters in Flemington, NJ, be sure to sign up for the guided tour of Mike Boasso’s brain. Mike, Director of Medical Illustration at Artcraft Health Education, has one of the more interesting brains you’ll ever enter.
Enter
most brains, and you’ll find one side of the brain doing most of the heavy
lifting. In the brains of musicians, artists, and poets, the right side of the
brain turns emotions into rhymes and colors while the left side putters. In the
brains of mathematicians, programmers, and surgeons, the left side logically
analyzes, 24/7, while the right side dabbles.
Ah,
but enter the brain of Mike Boasso and there is equality. Left side and right
side sharing the burden as one, teaching the world to sing in perfect harmony.
Truth be told, you could enter the brain of any medical illustrator at
Artcraft—Doug Walp, Brandon Keehner, or Jamie Rippke—and you’d see that same
shared division of labor between creativity and analysis. It’s the nature of
the beast for medical illustrators.
A
medical illustrator is a professional artist with an advanced education in the
life sciences. Medical illustrators must understand the human body at the same
level of detail as a doctor or nurse. And, they must be able to artistically
render any part of the body in perfect detail to help people understand how it
works, or why it isn’t working very well. It’s not a profession for the
dilettante.
Medical
illustrators train both sides of their brains heavily. The left side absorbs
courses in anatomy, pathology, microanatomy, physiology, embryology, and
neuroanatomy. The right side develops artistic technique through color theory,
instructional design, photography, interactive media development, 3D modeling,
Web design, and surgical illustration. The surgical illustration class is
likely to include hands-on cadaver dissection, which you may want to consider
before quitting your day job.
Medical
illustration is still a small field, with fewer than 2,000 trained
practitioners worldwide. But demand is growing, driven largely by advances in
computer graphics, animation, and imaging. A few years ago, a medical
illustrator’s work was most likely to be seen on a poster hanging in a doctor’s
exam room, with the title Understanding
Your Kidney. Today, medical illustrators are delving into cellular and even
subcellular processes. A current 3D animation might be titled Inside the Proximal Tubule. Medical
illustrations can even help scientists and laypeople visualize anatomical
details and processes far too small to be seen with anything short of an
electron microscope.
So,
what can the medical illustrators at Artcraft Health Education do for you?
That’s a whole ‘nuther subject that I’ll be posting about here in a few weeks.
Check this space for the next exciting episode.
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