The most beautiful such prints to date, Iris prints, were made with a printer manufactured by Iris Graphics.
Iris prints are showing up in more and more galleries lately.
Produced digitally with water-soluble inks sprayed on watercolor paper, Iris prints are more sensitive to light and temperature fluctuations than most photographic paper.
Velvety black-and-white Iris prints by the other co-director, Christa Bowden, are also built from separate pieces, in this case scanned directly from female bodies.
Even photography gets into the act through Iris prints made with a computer.
These depictions are then expanded upon and manipulated with both traditional media and computers, resulting in Impressionistic-looking Iris prints.
Recent Iris prints and additional works on paper are also on view.
They include eight jewel-colored Iris prints conclusively proving the existence of fairies and a new subgenre of table-top photography: table-top film.
They include Digigraph, Iris prints or Giclée, and Cromalin.
"Nature Morte," an Iris print from 1999, juxtaposes an image of a dead deer with a cluster of striped geometric forms on a striped ground.