PinnedPublished inNightingaleThe Missing Legacy of Marie NeurathRecognizing the co-creator of the Isotype as a data visualization pioneer.Jan 20, 2020Jan 20, 2020
Published inNightingaleNEW YORK ALIVE! Blending Performance and Data Art for a Whole Lot of Fun!There have been many ways to entertain, motivate, or even impassion an audience — why not try data performance?Mar 16, 2021A response icon2Mar 16, 2021A response icon2
Published inNightingaleNew Nightingale Editorial StandardsA guide to the new 2021 guidelines for submitting your articleFeb 22, 2021A response icon1Feb 22, 2021A response icon1
Published inNightingaleThe Future of NightingaleBy Jason Forrest and Mary AvilesFeb 8, 2021A response icon5Feb 8, 2021A response icon5
Published inNightingaleWar and Human NatureRevisiting a pamphlet from 1946 that helps explain what is happening in America right nowJan 19, 2021A response icon1Jan 19, 2021A response icon1
Published inNightingaleThe Influence of Isotype in New Deal Information Design: A Resettlement Administration ExhibitionHow the design concept influenced the American governments campaign to help its vulnerable populations.Oct 15, 2020A response icon2Oct 15, 2020A response icon2
Published inNightingaleNightingale: Our First YearHere, on our first birthday, editor-in-chief Jason Forrest takes a few moments for reflections and thank-yousJul 15, 2020Jul 15, 2020
Published inNightingaleThe Telefacts of Life: Rudolf Modley’s Isotypes in American Newspapers 1938–1945Exploring the life and work of Rudolf Modley by archiving hundreds of lost charts in American Newspapers.May 13, 2020A response icon1May 13, 2020A response icon1
Published inNightingaleHow John Burn-Murdoch’s Influential Dataviz Helped the World Understand CoronavirusAn interview with the Financial Times data-journalist about his experience visualizing the COVID-19 pandemicApr 14, 2020A response icon10Apr 14, 2020A response icon10
Published inNightingaleExploring Soviet Isotypes: Digitizing “The Struggle for Five Years in Four”Documenting the little-known Isotypes created by the IZOSTAT — a Soviet spin-off by Otto Neurath in 1932Apr 10, 2020A response icon2Apr 10, 2020A response icon2