About
Eva Priest is a multihyphenate working across academia and art. She has contributed to the peer-review of 2000+ academic papers with a focus on medical and cancer research, and sells original artwork via gallery representation, with themes including anatomy, culture, and memory.
With dual expertise in editing and art, Eva excels at bringing clarity and vision to both written works and visual projects, transforming concepts with a process-oriented approach and attention to fine details. Her experience includes the refinement of complex data and language, translating expert concepts with clarity and precision, and transforming ideas and emotions into visual media.
Within academia, Eva has contributed to the peer review of academic research across hard science fields such as cancer research, neuroscience, molecular biology, and clinical care and management, as well as novel fields such as artificial intelligence (AI), microplastics, and blockchain technology.
Eva has collaborated with a global range of industry professionals and experts from esteemed institutions such as Tokyo Medical and Dental University, University Children’s Hospital Zurich, and Umm Al-Qura University, Saudi Arabia, among others, and has edited works published in Q1-ranked journals such as Cancers, Applied Sciences, Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, and the Journal of Clinical Medicine.
As an artist, Eva is represented by the London-based international gallery DegreeArt (Artellite), where she sells original artwork, and also takes on commissioned artwork briefs and sells prints. She has also exhibited globally and has been featured in numerous zines and publications.
Deeply influenced by the works and writings of Agnes Martin, as well as travels undertaken to Texas, Mexico, and Honduras, Eva uses the medium of drawing to uncover the motifs, patterns, and symbols of a personal sense of perfection, formulated through the stimuli we consume, the memories we form and the places we visit. Themes that frequent her work include anatomy, culture, memory, female experiences, and contemplation.