🌍 Welcome to the Amphitheater! / ¡Bienvenidos al anfiteatro!
Languaje update (Versión en español abajo 👇) Welcome everyone. I created this space to bring together those who share a deep fascination for the human body and, above all, for its representation. Throughout my 15 years in medical publishing and as the founder of Anatomy One, I have proven that anatomy is never just a simple set of inert data. From the first dissection attempts in the Renaissance to CT scans and the Visible Human Project, every era has tried to solve the same problem: how to illuminate the dark architecture of flesh. This group was born to explore that intersection between science, art, and technology applied to the representation of the body. How does this bilingual community work? Due to the amazing influx of artists from all over the world, this community operates in both English and Spanish. Since Skool does not have an automatic translation feature, I will publish all major content, cycles, and resources in both languages within the same post. The categories on the left are unified by topic (not by language) because the language of 3D forms and anatomy is universal. Feel free to read, post, and comment in whichever language you are most comfortable with! What do we do here? This is not a basic software tutorial group (although there will be space for that). It is a place to debate, refine professional workflows, and understand the philosophy and aesthetics behind medical imaging. Here, we will cross current scientific rigor with the worldviews of the past. We will analyze the visual legacy of our predecessors, master the new technologies at our disposal, and explore how ancient and modern aesthetics continue to shape our vision of the human body. Whether you are a 3D modeler, scientific illustrator, fine artist, healthcare professional, or simply someone obsessed with the beauty and complexity of anatomy, you are in the right place. I would love to know who you are and what brings you here. Please introduce yourselves in the comments: tell me what you do and what aspect of anatomical representation you find most fascinating or difficult to solve.