Growing up, Ian always loved drawing and doodling, especially cartoons and people. He discovered how his interests in art and science could overlap while he was at university. One class in particular emphasized the connection between art and science: Ian’s vertebrate zoology course required students to keep detailed sketches of their dissections in lab notebooks, and they practiced sketching specimens as a way of communicating information. Ian’s professor was so impressed with his sketching skills that he hired Ian to do fish jaw sketches in his lab, which marked the beginning of Ian’s career combining art and science. In fact, if you search Wikipedia for “fish jaw,” the first drawing in the article is Ian’s sketch of a Cichlid fish!
Image credit: Gareth J Fraser C. Darrin Hulsey Ryan F Bloomquist Kristine Uyesugi Nancy R Manley J. Todd Streelman doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000031.g001, Toothed Oral and Pharyngeal Jaws (crop), CC BY-SA 3.0