
Barry Baker
Many artists and illustrators think that gilding the lily,
using extraneous information and eye candy in an illustration,
is the way to convey information. Barry taught me to stay simple
and to see clearly, not obfuscate. An illustrator is a communicator,
someone who takes complicated information and makes it understandable
to the viewer. Most of a medical illustrator's work involves
thinking and planning. The final execution of an illustration
is mere talent, but the first two demand ability to understand
complicated scientific concepts then find a way of transfering
this information in a clear manner. Barry did not let me get
bye easily, to him even the simplest illustration was worth doing
well. Only when you have worked for years, can you can sit down
and draw flawlessly and with ease, because the work has already
been done in the mind. It doesn't matter what media, software
or computer you use - owning a grand piano does not make you
a concert pianist. Here are two of his illustrations. NB these images are copyrighted
by Baylor College of Medicine. |
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