He doesn’t find the need to try and make things look cool. “Whenever I try to make something “cool” it tends to just look like crap. He lets the beauty take care of itself.
So what makes Bryan’s work so strong and compelling?
I can only describe Bryan’s work as beautiful simplicity. He is a master at taking out all of the extraneous information, all of the distracting details, and focusing solely on the pertinent information. He strips everything away without ever making his visuals boring or static.
His work falls into a variety of topics that include:
Bryan likes to refer to himself as a 3D illustrator who just happens to do medical illustration. And he happens to do it extremely well. “My studio isn’t strictly a medical studio; we take on a variety of work. It’s more of an informational design/illustration studio.”
Bryan Christie. I had seen this name over and over again in the fine print every time I saw a beautiful medical visual in a magazine. From Scientific American to Newsweek it seemed like Bryan Christie’s crisp, clear, and aesthetically pleasing visuals dominated medical editorial illustration. Problem was I had never heard of him in the rather small sphere of medical illustrators.
Obsessively covering the use of human anatomy in Medicine, Art, and Design
Beautiful simplicity: the work of Bryan Christie at Street Anatomy
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий