Thursday, 13 October 2011

The invisible world

 Michael Oliveri - University of Georgia professor and an amateur photographer shoots landscapes.But instead of meadows, forests, streams and hills of his photographs - nanostructures grown from a metal oxide fumes and powders heated at low pressure. But instead of meadows, forests, streams and hills of his photographs - nanostructures grown from a metal oxide fumes and powders heated at low pressure. A camera he prefers a scanning electron microscope. A camera he prefers a scanning electron microscope.

 Having first degree at the Faculty of Electronics, now Michael teaches art and digital technology at the University of Giorgio
 Michael makes his nano-views, which are closely intertwined science and art, in collaboration with his colleague on campus, a scientist named Chzhenvey Pan.
 Together they created a series called Innerspace.
 The subject of Michael - 1,000 times thinner than a human hair.
 They are all laboratory samples.
 These patterns of nano-art discovers new micro-and macro-relations, tricking the viewer their remarkable resemblance to our world.

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