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  • Using SciENcv to Create NIH Biosketches

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    SciENcv is an online platform for investigators to create biographical sketches using the common forms required by several federal agencies, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH), as part of their grant applications. The new NIH common forms link with investigators’ ORCID iDs and allow them to add citations from their ORCID profiles and NCBI My Bibliography.

    While NIH’s original date for requiring the use of SciENcv and the new NIH Biographical Sketch Common Form was January 25, 2026, due to major technical issues the guidance has been updated to allow for a period of leniency through approximately May 2026. That said, NIH Is encouraging investigators to move to the new system as soon as possible.

    Just getting started with SciENcv? View Open Science Librarian Andrew Creamer’s January 2026 presentation, Using SciENcv to Create a NIH Biographical Sketch Common Form. He also has a tip sheet for troubleshooting common issues setting up one’s account.

    Further questions? Email Health and Biomedical Library Services (HBLS) team at HealthSciLibrarians@brown.edu for help with the process.

    Additional resources:

    For support directly from NIH, or from the National Library of Medicine, which hosts SciENcv:

    From the NIH: 

  • A Pictorial Dragon, the Work of Fernando Birri: A Bilingual Online Exhibit

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    El Alba del Pájaro Americano [The Dawn of the American Bird]. Serie Espejismos del Karibe [Mirages of the Caribbean Series]. Cuba, May 1990. Watercolor and marker on paper.
    El Alba del Pájaro Americano [The Dawn of the American Bird]. Serie Espejismos del Karibe [Mirages of the Caribbean Series]. Cuba, May 1990. Watercolor and marker on paper. 

    View the online exhibit: library.brown.edu/exhibits/birri/

    This digital exhibition, fully accessible in both English and Spanish, celebrates the centennial of Fernando Birri (1925–2017), the pioneering Argentine filmmaker, artist and theorist of the New Latin American Cinema. Featuring drawings, paintings, collages and writings from his personal archive he gifted to Brown University Library in 2008, this selection reveals how Birri used art as a form of reflection and reinvention — responding to exile, identity, as well as the cultural and political urgencies of his time. The exhibition offers new insight into Birri’s expansive artistic practice and his enduring commitment to experimentation and transformation.

    An Archive of Intimate History

    Ya viene [It's Coming]. Trazos [Strokes] series, November 26, 1981. Photograph, marker.
    Ya viene [It’s Coming]. Trazos [Strokes] series, November 26, 1981. Photograph, marker.

    Widely recognized as the father of the New Latin American Cinema, Fernando Birri also produced an extensive body of visual art that has remained largely unknown to the public. Created during some of his most prolific years — spanning the 1960s to his final years in Cuba and Italy — his archive contains hundreds of paintings, drawings and collages in addition to films and written materials. These works appear both as independent pieces and as sketches on documents, napkins or travel notebooks. They reveal an artist driven by a persistent impulse to create images — what he called a dragón pictórico (pictorial dragon) — a practice that reached beyond what language or cinema could express.

    Developed alongside his filmmaking, Birri’s visual practice offers insight into a broader intellectual framework concerned with critical reflection, inner exploration and the processing of personal and historical turmoil. Considered together, these works offer a more expansive understanding of Birri’s artistic and intellectual contributions, extending beyond the boundaries of the cinematic form.

    The selection of works featured in this digital exhibit is drawn from the Fernando Birri Archive of Multimedia Arts 1925–2010, preserved at the John Hay Library, and features pieces that he occasionally exhibited during his lifetime in Cuba, Italy and Germany. It is organized around four key themes that reflect different facets of his pictorial practice. The first explores the intersection of the archive, exile, trauma and image-making. The second highlights his production during the 1970s, notably in Grottarossa outside Rome, his Studiolo in the Roman neighborhood of Trastevere, and during his travels to India. The third examines the relationship between painting and cinema, in particular in relation to his experimental film ORG, developed by Birri from 1968 to 1978 and released in 1979. The final section showcases his Caribbean work and two of his most significant series: the fotoglifos, paintings intended to be photographed and projected, and the glifotronics, developed using computer-based processes. Together, these sections offer insight into Birri’s visual language and the ways in which his art extended his ongoing engagement with experimentation, pedagogy and political imagination.

    Ma[e]stro Miró y discípulo Fer. Glifotronic Series, 54/1. Barcelona 1996.
    Ma[e]stro Miró y discípulo Fer. Glifotronic Series, 54/1. Barcelona 1996.

    A Pictorial Dragon: The Work of Fernando Birri was made possible through the generous support of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS), in partnership with the Brown University Library, whose combined funding and staff contributions were essential to the project.

    Curators and editor:

    Agustín Díez-Fischer, Co-Curator
    Patricia Figueroa, Co-Curator
    Irene Rihuete-Varea, Researcher and Editor

  • Health and Biomedical Library Services January 2026 News

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    Your HBLS librarians are always here to support you as researchers, scholars, clinicians, and fellow members of our Brown community. We hope your holiday season was a time for rest, reflection, and peace.

    As the university’s spring semester begins, we would like to share a significant library news item, as well as an upcoming workshop relevant to federal grant applicants and recipients.

    New Library Website

    On January 13, 2026, your Brown University Library launched a brand new website. All your essential resources remain, and we hope you’ll enjoy the new look and navigation, which aligns with the Brown University website.

    We’re very excited to announce that the library website now features a section all about HBLS staff, services, and resources! Bookmark our page for one-stop access to everything we offer, including a link to PubMed. If you prefer our traditional page of database links, our core health sciences resources page is still here for you.

    Upcoming HBLS Workshop on SciENcv

    Using SciENcv to Create NIH Biosketches
    January 28, 2026, noon to 1 p.m. Eastern (Register to attend on Zoom)

    SciENcv is an online platform for generating the customized CVs required by several federal agencies for the preparation and submission of grant applications. The NIH’s new Biographical Sketch Common Form on SciENcv will be required for all applications submitted on or after January 25, 2026. 

    On Wednesday January 28th from 12-1PM, join Advance RI-CTR and the Library for an online workshop on how to use SciENcv and the new Common Form to create a NIH biosketch. We will also cover how to obtain a required ORCID iD and use it, along with your My NCBI My Bibliography to add publications in your biosketch. A recording will be made available after the session, and you can always contact HBLS for support with all the topics covered in the workshop.

    Contact Your HBLS Librarians

    Email us at HealthSciLibrarians@brown.edu.
    The new HBLS website offers information about all our services and resources!
    Access your Brown University Library resources at https://go.brown.edu/HBLS.

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