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Shirley Wu
NET
|August 2019
Shirley Wu, one half of the popular Data Sketches project, creates highly interactive, beautiful data visualisations. Here she gives us a look behind the scenes and shares the lessons she’s learned.

Shirley Wu was introduced to data visualisation JavaScript library D3.js during her first job as a front-end software engineer at a big data company in San Francisco. She slowly fell in love with the tool because it combined her two main passions: art – Wu started drawing and painting when she was four years old – and maths. No wonder she describes herself as three-quarters code and one quarter art on Twitter.
Just four years after graduating from university, Wu took the plunge and went freelance to create data visualisations fulltime. She visualises a wide variety of topics covering culture, politics, art and more. Wu names three projects, all released in 2017, as major influences on her career. The first one, Data Sketches (www.datasketch.es), is a collaboration with fellow data visualisation designer Nadieh Bremer from Amsterdam, which introduced the duo to the data-viz community. The idea was to choose a topic every month, create a visualisation each and document the entire process – from the data preparation and the sketching of ideas to the execution.
“The write-ups were just an afterthought,” Wu remembers, “but it turned out to be what people like the most. They come up to us and tell us how amazing it is to look behind the scenes and see the iterations beyond the polished end result. It was a really quick idea but it took us a very long time to name the project. We have a whole document full of names. One of my favourites is Shirley’s and Nadieh’s Visualisation Marathon Adventure. Obviously we didn’t go with that one!”
The second project that put Wu on the map was an interactive visualisation of every line in the musical Hamilton for The Pudding (
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