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Created with high-quality printing techniques for a vivid and sharp image, this versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
Created with high-quality printing techniques for a vivid and sharp image, this versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
Steven Meyers reveals the secret inner life of flowers and plants in his exquisite X-ray photography. Meyers, a Washington state resident, was a medical radiology technologist for 25 years when he began experimenting with floral X-rays as an artistic medium in 1975. Originally shooting traditional landscapes, Meyers entered the virtually untapped world of X-ray photography, which unveils invisible texture, detail and shadow through negatives, positives, and solarized images, which are a combination of both. Meyers has created over 1,200 images, and continues to explore the grocery store for new radiographic subjects.
Read MoreThe secret inner beauty that lives beneath a flower’s surface is etched like diaphanous butterfly wings in Steven Meyers’ “Eucalyptus.” A medical radiology technologist for 25 years, Meyers began experimenting with floral X-rays in 1975, now peruses the grocery store for new radiographic subjects. Diverging from the traditional landscapes that he originally photographed, Meyers entered the virtually unexplored world of X-ray photography, which reveals otherwise invisible textures, details and shadows through negatives, positives, and combinations of the two.
Created with high-quality printing techniques for a vivid and sharp image, this versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
Steven Meyers reveals the secret inner life of flowers and plants in his exquisite X-ray photography. Meyers, a Washington state resident, was a medical radiology technologist for 25 years when he began experimenting with floral X-rays as an artistic medium in 1975. Originally shooting traditional landscapes, Meyers entered the virtually untapped world of X-ray photography, which unveils invisible texture, detail and shadow through negatives, positives, and solarized images, which are a combination of both. Meyers has created over 1,200 images, and continues to explore the grocery store for new radiographic subjects.
Read MoreThe secret inner beauty that lives beneath a flower’s surface is etched like diaphanous butterfly wings in Steven Meyers’ “Eucalyptus.” A medical radiology technologist for 25 years, Meyers began experimenting with floral X-rays in 1975, now peruses the grocery store for new radiographic subjects. Diverging from the traditional landscapes that he originally photographed, Meyers entered the virtually unexplored world of X-ray photography, which reveals otherwise invisible textures, details and shadows through negatives, positives, and combinations of the two.