Artists In Jackson: Jen Dixon

Just a few years ago, Jen Dixon couldn’t brush their teeth, let alone imagine being surrounded by community and creativity.

“I was agoraphobic for five years,” they explain. “Didn’t meet people. I was training for COVID before COVID.”

The isolation was deepened by chronic illness, pain, and years of battling to be seen—not just as a person living with disabilities, but also as a nonbinary creative with a past shaped by trauma and tenacity.

Today, Jen stands surrounded by microscopes, T-shirts, illuminated signs, handmade cellular art, and a growing circle of collaborators who genuinely believe in them.

“Right now, I think the real art is learning to trust myself again,” they say.

A Scientific Soul in a Maker’s World

Jen’s path hasn’t followed any straight lines. They first studied computer programming while working full-time and caring for a terminally ill fiancé.

But after a near-death experience caused by a massive blood clot following a roller derby injury, they re-evaluated everything.

“I remember crawling across the floor thinking, ‘This is your last moment. Experience it,’” Jen recalls. “And after surviving that, cubicles just weren’t going to cut it.”

What followed was a dive into botany, volunteering at Iowa State’s herbarium, and eventually entering a PhD program.

Their love of science came with an endless hunger to understand.

“One of my professors said I was an artist with the soul of a scientist,” they say. “That felt true.”

Jen’s artistic practice came to life while teaching plant systematics in Iowa.

When a visually impaired student entered their classroom, Jen faced a challenge: how to share the microscopic beauty of cellular structures with someone who couldn’t see them?

That night, they created a clay version of a microscope slide and transformed invisible wonders into tactile art. If the student couldn’t see the cell, then they would be able to feel it.

“I don’t know how well it worked for her,” they say, “but for me, it unlocked something. It made me think: what if everyone could feel this beauty?”

Creating with Curiosity, Sharing with Empathy

From there, Jen’s art grew out of curiosity and constraint. While bedridden, they began sketching detailed cellular forms in Procreate, finding comfort in radial symmetry and microscopic inspiration.

Eventually, they started laser-engraving these intricate images into wood and velvet.

“I just wanted to see if it would work,” they say. “It was all experimentation.”

Jen’s art now includes protest T-shirts, building signage, velvet-burned botanical forms, and tactile pieces made of wood and reused materials.

“It all came from wanting people to experience wonder—even if they can’t see it the traditional way,” Jen explains. “There’s got to be a way to share that.”

Today, Jen’s studio is a living lab—a DIY playground of soldered lights, etched acrylic, scavenged pipe supports, and refurbished microscopes.

“Everything is a version one,” they laugh. “The next version will be better, but I have to start somewhere.”

Jen Dixon - Artists In Jackson

Building a Community That Builds You Back

Jen is now helping to build a community at The Sparks (formerly the Commercial Exchange), where collaboration drives creativity and progress.

From teaching others how to build and reusing materials to organizing artist showcases, they’ve found their voice again.

“I used to think I didn’t have any value unless I met society’s expectations,” they say. “Now I just try stuff. And it’s working. All these different paths in my life, they have all culminated into skills and work that’s relevant and useful.”

Even through lingering self-doubt and social anxiety, Jen persists – out into the sun and into an artistic team.

“I’m deciding how I engage with the world now,” they said. “I see the potential for the future, even if it’s scary. I catch the future out of the corner of my eye. And I’m scared to look right at it because it may disappear.”

“But right now? My future is possible.”

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