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About:
Artist Don Dudenbostel
Since early
childhood Don Dudenbostel has been interested in photography
as an art form. Also serious about science he found a way to
combine art and science for a high school science fair project
in the 1960's. He developed a friendship with an engineer with
a General Electric X-ray who introduced him to radiographic
imaging. With the help of the G.E. engineer Dudenbostel built
his first x-ray apparatus from a variety of discarded parts.
The system uses very low penetration, soft x-rays that do not
totally penetrate the soft, delicate structure of the plants.
In 1975 he had
the opportunity to study with Ansel Adams at his home in
Yosemite National Park. It is now thirty years later and he
has refocused on x-ray imaging. Due to advances in science, he
is now able to capture even more of the delicacies of his
subject matter.
"The
equipment I use is very different from traditional x-ray
equipment; it is made of discarded components. The tube I use
has an extremely thin beryllium window which allows the lowest
energy to emerge. The process involves placing photo film in a
light tight, thin black envelope. The specimen is places on
top of this, then the x-ray tube is placed above it all. The
exposure time varies depending on the energy level used. The
resulting negative has a long tonal scale and is inappropriate
for traditional development. I take the negative and make a
very high-resolution digital scan, then refine it on my
computer. The resulting images are 100% carbon pigment, which
contains no dyes. "
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