Photograph by Hugh Turvey
“I am an experimentalist and I think in images. Since I started working with x-ray in the late 1990’s, I am constantly amazed with how little I know.” —Hugh Turvey
JEANNE MODDERMAN: Tell me about your initial foray into x-ray imaging.
HUGH TURVEY: My x-ray passion was ignited
after a designer friend asked for a broken bone image for an album
cover. At the time, I was doing a four-year apprenticeship with iconic
music photographer Gered Mankowitz in London. I took a walk from his
studio in Belsize Park up to the local hospital to meet the head of
radiography to seek his advice. (Oh, and yes I was planning to be a rock
and roll photographer.)
JEANNE: What is the most challenging aspect of your work?
HUGH: Density defines my work. Very big or
very small objects challenge the technology and physics. Commercially
we have been asked to x-ray a huge range of subjects over the years. We
once had a call from Saatchi Advertising in London wanting to know if I
could x-ray a building. In my mind nothing is impossible, but a line has
to be drawn somewhere.
The trickiest image was trying to get a series of simultaneous
rotating x-ray and visible light objects for an educational eBook and
app called “X is for X-ray.” This had never been done before and the
technology didn’t really exist. So with a lot of patience and
melding of techniques we were able to introduce kids to science an
easily digestible format. I am very proud of this and am continuing work
on it.
JEANNE: Do you have a favorite image?
HUGH: One of my personal favorite images is titled
“Femme Fatale.” It is a colored x-ray image of a woman’s foot in a
stiletto shoe. It is one of my first images, transparent,
self-explanatory and has become an iconic image inadvertently, possibly
made more unique by radiation law amendments. It also happens to be my
wife and a fitting portrait of my sole mate…pun intended.
JEANNE: Your work has been published a few times in National Geographic magazine. I recently assigned you to x-ray an elephant skull for the February issue. Can you talk about the process?
HUGH: Have you ever tried to get an
elephant skull? Have you ever tried to lift an elephant skull? It turns
out that I have now, and needless to say it was not easy.
We are accustomed to sourcing specimens and had recently imaged a huge python for National Geographic
and a series of peregrine falcons for Discovery. However an elephant
skull with good teeth in the mandible was a little more elusive. We were
put in contact with a company who works to ensure the welfare of
non-domesticated, wild animals which have been abandoned, confiscated,
or surrendered. They had not only a skull and mandible, but also the
tusks, a collection of ivory and skin items and an elephant foot table.
(The total insurance value of these objects was nearly $150,000!) To
lift the skull required three people, and two for the mandible.
Normal medical equipment is very finely calibrated to the human body
and useless for this application. We were forced to upgrade to
industrial x-ray which is normally used for x-raying engineering
structures, such as bridges.
JEANNE: Can you talk about your post-process work? What goes into making the finished product?
HUGH: We have huge pieces of film that need
digitizing using photographic scanners. These are layered and combined
to produce a grayscale image at approximately 1GB. Coloring is where you
can interject depth back into the image and control the path of the eye
over the image. Even though I have written the smallest reply to this
question, post-process accounts for at least 70% of my time!Hugh Turvey’s solo show X-POSÉ: Material and Surface, will be on display at the Oxo Tower Wharf, London February 12-23. Follow Jeanne Modderman on Twitter and Instagram.
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