BIO
Miranda Meyer was born and raised in Iowa City,
Iowa. She began her photography career as a girl, taking pictures
of the family cats with a 110 Instamatic. She bought her first
real 35mm camera when she was 15, with money she had earned detasseling
corn. She majored in art and photography at the University of
Iowa. Her favorite course was one in which she and her classmates
walked around studying trees. After graduating she worked as a
photographer for the Michigan City News-Dispatch and
the Cedar Rapids Gazette, but grew tired of being assigned
to chase tornados, of which she is deathly afraid. Since 2003
she has worked as a staff photographer for the University of Iowa,
where she does portraits, group shots, art photography, sports
photography, and digital processing.
Though Miranda enjoys photographing many different
subjects, her principal interest is flowers. She strives to capture
and elucidate intricate structures and surface textures, and,
in her best work, subverts expectations to discover characteristics—elegance,
dignity, pathos, shyness—that elude even a close
observer. She is careful to avoid sentimentality and sensationalism.
She passes on riots of bloom and frames her subjects alone, isolated
andvulnerable. Tulips and lilies and irises distill to themselves,
revealing an otherworldly beauty, a startling unfamiliarity, as
though we are not seeing flowers we have lived with for centuries
but strange, luminescent organisms newly-discovered on the ocean
floor.
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