Check Out Our INDS Alumni Cameron Slayden
Cameron is the Recipient of the Outstanding Alumni Award
UMBC News and Magazine Article: The molecular storyteller: How Cameron Slayden '99 advances science through animation
Inside the dark, swirling chaos of a cell, drama unfolds. A viral molecule, rendered in electric blue and menacing curves, attempts its invasion. A therapeutic compound swoops in to intercept it like a fighter jet defending its home from alien forces. This is not science fiction; it is the meticulously crafted vision brought to life by Cameron Slayden '99, interdisciplinary studies, founder, CEO, and creative director at Microverse Studios.
Slayden's team of animators specializes in creating detailed, stunning visuals for biotech, pharmaceutical, and medical device companies, illustrating how their technologies operate at the most granular level—on a cellular and molecular scale. "We never copy other people," says Slayden. Instead, his team embraces metaphor—visualizing neurons as jellyfish tentacles or lightning bolts—and superimpose that artistic aesthetic onto the scientific imagery.
It's not enough for Slayden to just be a 3D animator. He also needs to fully understand the science—satisfying practicing scientists with his two-minute animation while compelling venture capitalists to invest millions. "I have to balance clarity of message to reach multiple levels of audience with enough accuracy so that the underlying message is unimpeachable," says Slayden.
This unique balance of artistic flair and scientific rigor is the direct result of a path galvanized over three decades ago. For his pioneering work in scientific visualization, combining the rigorous inquiry of science with the persuasive power of art, Slayden is being recognized with an Outstanding Alumni award at the 2025 UMBC Alumni Awards on Wednesday, October 29. His career exemplifies the interdisciplinary spirit UMBC fosters, proving that to truly understand the world, one must be able to both analyze it like a scientist and appreciate it like an artist.
Illustrations have more value than just beauty
Even as a 16-year-old student at Suitland High School in Prince George's County, Maryland, Slayden was already balancing his passion for art with his love of science—but he had yet to discover how the two intertwined. At this time, Slayden had won multiple Gold Key awards, the highest regional prize in the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, a competition for students in grades 7-12, which, he admits, had given him a "hugely inflated ego." Then, during one biology class, inspiration struck while studying chloroplasts, the organelles in plant cells that are responsible for photosynthesis.
"The illustration in the textbook was awful, really ridiculous, extremely simplified," says Slayden.
Next to the illustration, however, was a cross-section of the cell created from a tunneling electron microscope, which creates images at an extremely small scale, down to resolving individual molecules. Immediately, Slayden began to notice differences between the illustration and the tunneling electron micrograph. That's when his pencil got to work. He began to sketch a more detailed illustration of the chloroplast that better represented the intricate details of the organelle.
"When I was done with that drawing, I remember realizing that that illustration had more value than just being pretty," says Slayden. "It carried real information about the world, and it was valuable to humanity in that way. And at that moment, I realized that was the kind of art that I wanted to do."
The rest of Slayden's life would be guided by that moment. From then on, he used every opportunity to hone his craft—to envision how each tiny detail would translate to paper.
"When you're drawing something, you're bringing it through your visual cortex and through all of the processing," explains Slayden. "Your brain is creating a three-dimensional model of the object in your head, and then you're bringing it out through your motor cortex onto the paper. You come away with a much deeper understanding of the thing that you were just drawing."
Fruitful friction
Around the same time Slayden was looking into colleges, something big was happening at UMBC. Earl and Darielle Linehan, with a deeply held belief in the importance of the arts in society, had recently made a generous gift to the university to establish the Linehan Artist Scholars Program. Slayden applied in the program's inaugural year and was then offered a full ride to UMBC as one of the first cohort of Linehan Artist Scholars.
Slayden seized the opportunity, working with his advisor, Stephen Bradley, to craft an interdisciplinary course load that seamlessly merged UMBC's stellar biology program with the visual arts curriculum. While the science courses provided the foundational accuracy, it was the friction in the art program that proved transformative.
"There was an artistic journey that I had to go through," says Slayden. "UMBC's art program forced me to dig deep and crack open my inner reservoirs of creativity and start to actually explore producing an emotional response in my audience."
Today, that emotional engagement is the key to the success of Microverse Studios, transforming dry scientific information into a memorable, persuasive story. However, the greatest impact UMBC had on Slayden and his career was not a class or a professor, but a fellow student—Olivia Rogers '99, psychology—now Olivia Slayden, his wife.
Following graduation, Slayden got a job doing medical illustrations for legal cases, but found the work to be "too dark and draining." He eventually landed the role of scientific illustrator at Science Magazine, creating medical illustrations for the publication and designing a dozen magazine covers. However, after three years, he realized, "I wasn't at the top of my game." At the same time, Olivia was also unhappy with her job. It was time for a change.
After Slayden received his master's degree in medical illustration from Augusta University in Georgia, he and Olivia founded Microverse Studios in 2005. Cameron serves as CEO and creative director, while Olivia serves as chief commercial officer.
Cameron Slayden '99
"I had no idea what I was doing running a business," says Slayden. "And in the intervening 20 years, I think I've kind of finally figured it out, at least for the most part."
Leaning into new tech
Today, Microverse Studios is a full-service scientific and medical animation studio serving high-profile clients like Pfizer, National Geographic, Bausch + Lomb, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) as well as notable startups like Elon Musk's Neuralink. Slayden and his team specialize in taking an idea and turning it into a deployment-ready video for a wide range of audiences, from research scientists to investors and venture capitalists, as well as healthcare providers.
Slayden attributes the studio's success to their commitment to staying on top of science and new animation technology. The shift to cloud rendering means complex, high-quality animation that once took a week to output can now be rendered in "literally an hour." Slayden also believes artificial intelligence will continue to play a larger role in the studio's work. Rather than viewing it as a threat, he sees AI as another tool at his disposal—the next evolution in how artists create their work.
Mark your calendars for the 2025 Alumni Awards on Wednesday, October 29, at 6 p.m., and consider joining the UMBC community at the Chesapeake Employers Insurance Arena to celebrate Cameron Slayden and the many remarkable individuals receiving awards. The event will be livestreamed for those unable to join in person. You can learn more at alumni.umbc.edu/alumniawards.
Posted: October 28, 2025, 2:45 PM