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  1. Sep 12, 2023 · Bruce Blausen, Med ’87 (MA), created the world’s largest library of medical illustrations and 3D animations, which will be available to all of the Johns Hopkins Health System. “That paper touched my hand and I said, ‘That’s it. I’m going to build the human body in 3D,’” Blausen remembers.

  2. May 30, 2018 · With more than 28,000 3D animations and illustrations detailing everything from electromagnetic arrays to sarcomeric Z-lines, the Blausen Medical Library is the largest visual collection of its kind, and unrestricted access to all files in perpetuity will soon be a luxury enjoyed exclusively by the UT Austin community.

  3. Jun 21, 2023 · This fellowship program will nurture the training and education of 10 medical artists, encouraging them to create 100 new medical illustrations featuring patients of color over the next year.

    • BLACK ENTERPRISE Editors
  4. Jun 11, 2018 · In 1991, Blausen founded Blausen Medical Communications Inc. and currently serves as CEO. He has continued to refine, enhance and add to the library ever since. The company now includes a 12 ...

  5. Jul 18, 2008 · Archiving, storing and cataloguing medical illustrations. The vast amount of medical illustrations of all types that has accumulated over the last two millennia, must raise the question of how all this pictorial information can be stored and catalogued, to enable historians in the fields of art and medicine alike to retrieve and contemplate them.

    • Jenni Tsafrir, Avi Ohry
    • 2001
  6. As with all histories, past informs present, thus it’s worthwhile to present the roots of medical illustration. The polymath Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519), is the godfather of medical illustration within western culture. Da Vinci’s pen and ink illustrations of his own anatomic dissections are quite famous and admired ( Figure 1 ), despite ...

  7. An Army archivist is undertaking a massive project to digitize and make public a unique collection of rare and sometimes startling military medical images, from the Civil War to Vietnam. This previously unreported archive at the Army-run National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C., contains 500,000 scans of unique images so far ...

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