NASA spacesuit x-ray
”X-Ray” by @amazing_jiro (IG)
Face paint: amazing_jiro Hair & makeup: Yui Amano Model: Katsuyuki Namba Photo: @kodamax_photo Movie: art design eND [http://end-llc.com/] (Source)
“X-rays reveal the inner beauty of shells.” National Geographic. March 1955.
X-Funk a mural by Shok-1
Geneticist: - An X-ray of two lovers kissing (via)
This amazing Pac-Man X-Ray picture by artist SHOK-1. He calls this work “The Consumer.”
Western music was largely banned in the USSR, and so pop music lovers had to copy smuggled records themselves, using very basic equipment. In place of expensive vinyl, they discovered that old X-ray film, liberated from hospital dumpsters, worked well enough, and thus roentgenizdat were born. In fact, they were a key part of a vibrant underground music scene, opposed at every turn by the state. In 1959, with the establishment of an official “Music Patrol,” many roentgenizdat distributors were actually sent to prison.
Read the original article and DO NOT MISS the examples like “Heartbreak Hotel”
X-ray Coke by ideum on Flickr.
Nature from the inside out — beautiful X-ray images show the hidden complexity of the natural world
Radiation physicist Arie van’t Riet never thought he’d be an artist. But after a colleague asked him to X-ray a painting, Arie saw a world of possibilities for X-ray imaging outside the hospital. He began to X-ray all sorts of atypical subjects — flowers, plants, bugs, snails, lizards — seduced by the challenge of recreating natural scenes.
In a fascinating talk at TEDxGroningen, Arie explains his journey from physicist to artist, and shares the process behind his beautiful, sometimes-tricky art. Says Arie, “I try to combine the visible world, with color and surface, with the X-ray world — the inner.”
All photos copyright Arie van’t Riet. To see more of Arie’s work, visit his website.