Hashime Murayama

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hashime_Murayama an entity of type: Thing

Hashime Murayama (1879–1954) was a Japanese American painter and scientific illustrator. He was best known for his exquisite paintings of birds, insects, fish, mammals, and other wildlife. Employed by the National Geographic Society from 1921 to 1941, his work was featured in The National Geographic Magazine. During World War II he was interned for being Japanese. Despite this, he worked with George Papanicolaou at Cornell University, creating images of cancer cells that were used to train diagnosticians and prove the effectiveness of the Pap smear as a life-saving cancer screening method. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hashime Murayama
rdf:langString Hashime Murayama
rdf:langString Hashime Murayama
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Japan
xsd:integer 51028859
xsd:integer 995846285
xsd:integer 1879
rdf:langString Hashime Murayama, 1939
xsd:integer 1954
rdf:langString artist, scientific illustrator
rdf:langString Hashime Murayama (1879–1954) was a Japanese American painter and scientific illustrator. He was best known for his exquisite paintings of birds, insects, fish, mammals, and other wildlife. Employed by the National Geographic Society from 1921 to 1941, his work was featured in The National Geographic Magazine. During World War II he was interned for being Japanese. Despite this, he worked with George Papanicolaou at Cornell University, creating images of cancer cells that were used to train diagnosticians and prove the effectiveness of the Pap smear as a life-saving cancer screening method.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8017
xsd:gYear 1879
xsd:gYear 1954

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