Biography
Eliza Stierle is a Chicago-based creative strategist and medical illustrator who brings science to life through compelling visual storytelling. With a passion for transforming complex ideas into accessible and emotionally resonant experiences, her scientific visualization work aims to educate, engage, and inspire diverse audiences.
Originally from Dayton, Ohio, Eliza earned dual degrees in Studio Art (BFA) and Biological Sciences (BS) from the University of South Carolina, and studied internationally in Italy and Prague. She is currently finishing her Master of Science in Biomedical Visualization at the University of Illinois Chicago, where her ongoing work explores how narrative and design can deepen scientific understanding.
Eliza’s creative leadership extends beyond her individual practice. She is the lead event manager and host of the annual “Terrible” Medical Illustration Exhibition and Gala, a playful black-tie event that has become a beloved highlight of the Association of Medical Illustrators’ annual conference. Her ability to build community, coordinate large-scale creative initiatives, and craft memorable experiences reflects a broader commitment to connection within the field.
Outside the studio, Eliza is a semi-professional setter in the Volleyball League of America, and competes in beach and grass tournaments across the country. She also enjoys hot yoga, weightlifting, traveling, and spending as much time outdoors as possible, fueling both her creativity and her curiosity about the world.
Driven by a love for collaboration and community, Eliza is committed to creating work that connects people not only to science, but to each other. She believes that when art and research intersect, they spark conversations that enrich understanding and strengthen shared experiences. Through every collaboration, she strives to build understanding not just of scientific concepts, but of one another.
See the original article posted to the University of South Carolina's website here.
Drawing on both sides of the brain
2020 graduate combines love of art, science with double major
Posted on: December 3, 2020; Updated on: December 3, 2020
By Craig Brandhorst
If you think the visual arts and the hard sciences don’t mix, think again. Or maybe just talk to Eliza Stierle.
The Dayton, Ohio, native and 2020 University of South Carolina graduate double-majored in studio art and biology (with a minor in art history) and aspires to become a medical illustrator. It’s a dream she’s had since high school, when her art teacher recognized her dual interests and encouraged her to combine them.
“She knew that I liked both things, and that kind of turned me on to the profession of medical illustration,” Stierle says. “Surgery animation, diagrams, the drawings in med school textbooks, biology textbooks, posters in the doctor’s office — everything under that umbrella.”
It’s a competitive field. The Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, the accreditor recognized by the Association of Medical Illustrators, lists just four graduate programs in the U.S. and Canada. Programs also tend to be small, admitting just a few students each fall.
But Stierle, who took the GRE in November, the same week she framed and hung her BFA exhibition at a Columbia coffee shop, is used to pushing herself. She carried a heavy course load throughout her time at South Carolina, which included summer sessions and Maymesters, so she could finish undergrad in three and a half years. The plan, pre-pandemic, was to give herself a break before, hopefully, starting a master’s program in fall 2021.
“I love learning, that constant pursuit of knowledge.”
“I like being busy, I’ve always been super busy, so I thought, ‘Let’s just get through this in three and half years so I can take a few months off and just relax, be a normal person for a while,’” she says. “And then I can throw myself back into the crazy busy schedule that I’m used to.”
In the meantime, she is exploring job opportunities at galleries and museums, possibly something related to her biology major. “I’m looking to continue to learn and challenge myself before I hopefully start grad school in the fall,” she says.
Stierle has always embraced challenges and new adventures. The attitude that led her to an atypical double major also led her to back-to-back study abroad programs, including one in Prague and another “unofficial study abroad” experience in the tiny hilltop village of Monte Castello, Italy, where she modeled for figure drawing classes and completed an independent study.
“It gave me the opportunity to slow down and reflect, to enjoy the moment,” she says of the Italy trip. “It was styled as a sort of arts residency, so I could do whatever art project I wanted. I truly took advantage of the studio space there but also the panoramic landscapes. I did a lot of Plein air painting. That definitely expanded my skillset.”
Study abroad also expanded her mindset and positioned her to finish strong upon her return to campus.
“Just seeing how different cultures operate and how different people are — I feel like I’m constantly picking up new experiences,” she says. “I love learning, that constant pursuit of knowledge. That changed me coming back to campus, and kind of changed my outlook, I suppose.”
Faculty and staff had something to do with that, too, starting with Rebecca Boyd, an undergraduate student services coordinator in the School of Visual Art and Design, who took an interest in Stierle’s interests during her initial college tour. She also namechecks instructors April South and Megan Dantzler Gamble in the biology department, and associate professors Brent Dedas and Sara Schneckloth in the School of Visual Art and Design —“Really, all of them have been phenomenal,” she says.
The high point of her college experience, though, was the spring semester of 2020 — before Covid-19 moved classes online. “I wasn’t necessarily learning new information,” she explains. “My professors were now talking about things in ways that I hadn’t thought about them before. I started making new connections in my mind.”
Her art training started to pay dividends in her science labs. Her science instruction started to dovetail with what her art professors were discussing in class. The two seemingly disparate fields came together in unanticipated ways.
“For example, I was taking comparative vertebrae anatomy with Dr. South, and going in a lab and being able to render a drawing of a dissected shark was really helpful when I was reviewing,” she explains. “Similarly, in my painting classes, my professors would talk about the science behind how people view and interpret composition or interpret color. It was just really cool to see everything I’d been studying all come together.”
Stierle’s BFA exhibition, Capturing the Spirits of the Boundary Waters, is showing at The Front Coffee & Tap in Columbia through Feb. 4.