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History Zip Pouch featuring the photograph X-ray Of Crested Chameleon, 1896 by Metropolitan Museum of Art

Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.

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X-ray Of Crested Chameleon, 1896 Zip Pouch

Metropolitan Museum of Art

by Metropolitan Museum of Art

$25.00

Size

Bottom Style

Image Size

 
 

Product Details

Dress it up, dress it down, or use it to stay organized while you're on the go.   Our zip pouches can do it all.   They're crafted with 100% poly-poplin fabric, double-stitched at the seams for extra durability, and include a durable metal zipper for securing your valuables.

Our zip pouches are available in three different sizes and with two different bottom styles: regular and t-bottom.

Design Details

Historical X-ray of a crested chameleon. Taken by Josef Maria Eder (Austrian, 1855-1944) and Eduard Valenta (Austrian, 1857-1937). Photogravure,... more

Care Instructions

Spot clean or dry clean only.

Ships Within

2 - 3 business days

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Zip Pouch Tags

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Photograph Tags

photographs animal photos reptile photos history photos historical photos historic photos 19th century photos 1800s photos x-ray photos xray photos radiograph photos science photos early photos skeletal system photos anatomy photos structure photos

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Artist's Description

Historical X-ray of a crested chameleon. Taken by Josef Maria Eder (Austrian, 1855-1944) and Eduard Valenta (Austrian, 1857-1937). Photogravure, 1896. Eder was the director of an institute for graphic processes and the author of an early history of photography. With the photochemist Valenta, he produced a portfolio in January 1896, less than a month after Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen published his discovery of X-rays. Eder and Valenta's volume, from which this plate derives, demonstrated the X-ray's magical ability to reveal the hidden structure of living things. Human hands and feet, fish, frogs, a snake, a chameleon, a lizard, a rat, and a newborn rabbit are all presented in exquisitely printed photo-gravures, as are carved cameos and an assortment of natural materials. In an era when photography's ability to accurately depict the visible world had become commonplace, this newfound capacity to record the invisible opened up a host of possibilities, both scientific and aesthetic.

 

$25.00