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Imago Ignota

The digital artwork featured in this gallery section are ‘scanographic montages’ created between 2004 and 2012.

Scanography is a digital art process that uses a flat bed scanner as a kind of camera lens to record three dimensional objects. Scans of objects often offer close-up focus on details that aren’t easily captured with a camera.  Veins on a leaf or threads in a piece of fabric are magnified in vivid, hyper-reality as direct light from the scanner and close proximity of the object is enhanced during the scanning process.

By using a simple (Roxio) photo features program I eventually began layering and transmogrifying some of the original scanographs into scanographic montages. Something that suggested a fish became a fish; curled tip of a flower became a dancer; edge of a silver spoon glowed like the quarter moon.

Imago Ignota (unknown image)

“A quest for the obscure, a quest that is self sufficient… Language of the incomprehensible… A pattern of words, shapes, colours, that has no correspondence with the normal… Its own reality, a created reality, the imagined antecedents and the aftermaths of many realities.”  – The Dictionary of Symbols by C. E. Cirlot.