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Mr. Mark Klingler
Visual Design
Department
Mark A. Klingler has been a scientific illustrator
at Carnegie Museum of Natural History since 1990, training in
this field with the Department of Invertebrate Zoology from 1985-1990
while attending Carnegie Mellon University for his BFA. His work
has appeared in numerous international publications such as Science,
Nature, and National Geographic, in museum exhibits at the Bell
Museum (MN), the Oakland Museum (CA), and the Smithsonian Institution,
textbooks, scientific journals, newspapers, and websites such
as CNN and Discovery.
An active member of the Guild of Natural Science Illustrators (GNSI) and Pittsburgh
Society of Illustrators (PSI), Mark has presented workshops and shows on wildlife
illustration at both the local and national level. He is particularly interested
in teaching introductory art and illustration, as well as fostering a sense of
community among art students and professionals. Last summer Klingler was able
to arrange a collaborative project with OAA students and faculty to produce Torosaurus
lepidopteron for Pittsburgh’s DinoMite Days public art project. (A second
dinosaur, Pitt-sanky, was produced with wife Cathy and friend Rick Antolic.)
Klingler was recently awarded the 2003 John J. Lanzendorf PaleoArt Prize for
Scientific Illustration by the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP), the
premier society for paleontologists worldwide. The winning artwork was a fossil
reconstruction of Hadrocodium wui, the earliest mammal ever discovered, that
appeared on the cover of the May 25, 2001 edition of Science. The image also
accompanied the newswire article that was picked up by almost every major newspaper
in North America, Europe, and Asia.
Mark resides in Lower Burrell, PA with his wife Cathy and their two cats. He
especially enjoys working in the garden and taking walks in the woods to find
inspiration for his art.
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