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Based on the face of Jesus from the Shroud
of Turin, this picture is made up of thousands of individual bar codes.
The artist who created it did so not to inspire devotion but to ask questions
about Jesus, faith and technology.
Click here for a close-up
of the individual bar codes which make up the face.
To take part in an online vote about the faces of Jesus, click
here.
Thanks to Scott Blake for permission to use these
images.
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Scott Blake, from Savannah, Georgia, makes portraits
which combine art with technology. He says: "As a computer artist,
I am in the business of selling pixels. The bar code represents technology,
efficiency and commodities. It is the universal icon for the computer
revolution."
Scott has produced several images of the face of
Jesus, and all of them are made up of thousands of individual bar codes.
Starting with a scanned image taken from a Shroud of Turin hologram card,
Scott matched the light areas of the face with light bar codes, and the
shadowed areas with dark bar codes. It took his computer four days to
produce the final image, which is almost 1.4 metres square.
The image above has an extra element. "I used
individual words from the Bible's book of Revelation that I bar coded
to paint a portrait of Jesus," Scott explains. If you click
here, you can view a close-up of the image showing the individual
bar codes. Each code is made from a word taken from the text of the book
of Revelation: words such as king, sand, jasper, waters and healed.
Scott's portrait of Christ, unlike the other faces
of Jesus shown in this gallery, is not intended to encourage faith or
devotion. Instead it is about asking questions. "This face has been
completely engineered to make Jesus the ultimate poster boy for selling
God's word," says Scott. "This piece is an attack on the accepted
image of Christ, as well as the sacred text of the Christian Bible. It
tests faith in religion and by doing so it questions the true meaning
of any faith; be it in God, technology, or yourself."
What do you think? Do you find this image, or the
way it has been produced, interesting, thought-provoking or inspiring?
Or what? Click
here to give your opinion on our community boards.
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