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September 20, 2024
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Class Note Up Close: Science illustrator Tami Tolpa

Tami Tolpa 鈥95 Tami Tolpa 鈥95
Tami Tolpa 鈥95

Tolpa has dual degrees in studio art and environmental studies. It wasn鈥檛 until she had surgery during her senior year at 91社区 that she saw how the two disciplines complemented each other.

鈥淭he procedure sparked a curiosity about the science of the human body that I hadn鈥檛 had before. My aunt was in nursing school, and I saw the pen and ink illustrations in her textbooks. The elegant line work reminded me of the etchings I made in studio art classes, and something clicked. I decided that I wanted to make art that was beautiful and that also illuminated science,鈥 she says.

Deciding what to include and what to eliminate, as well as how to frame the entire graphic, is Tolpa鈥檚 biggest challenge. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a big push in scientific illustration to clarify rather than simplify. It鈥檚 work to strike the right balance,鈥 she says.

Tolpa says it helps that she鈥檚 not particularly squeamish.

鈥淲hen I was at 91社区, I often performed amateur taxidermy on birds I found on campus. I also have performed dissections. I took human gross anatomy as part of my MFA program in medical illustration at the Rochester Institute of Technology, and it remains one of the most profound experiences of my life.鈥

She and a colleague recently finished illustrations for the American Association of Pathology Assistants for their Grossing Guidelines, a tool for examining and processing cancer specimens.

鈥淟ooking at clinical photographs of cancer took some getting used to. What kept me inspired was knowing that our illustrations were ultimately going to help cancer patients. And I learned a great deal about pathology and about the people who do this important work.鈥

Tolpa and a business partner formed a company called to help scientists communicate. 鈥淲e realized that most science visuals are made by scientists themselves, not by professionals like us.鈥

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