Think flower photography has reached it's creative limits? Clearly photographer Lisa Creagh didn't agree since her latest project 'The Instant Garden' brings the humble flower hurtling into the digital age.

In 'The Instant Garden' Creagh aims to represent the intensive farming of flowers by showing how industry has tied together the traditionally opposing flowers and science/ maths. She achieves this by taking tiny sections of still life flower shots and moulding them into a highly intricate, decorative pattern inspired by persian carpets.

“Digital technology is changing photography,” Creagh says. “There’s a very modernist aesthetic of the instant moment, and that’s defined photography for the last 60 years. But I think pattern is very relevant in digital photography. It’s more about repetition and a series of endless cycles, something being the same but repeated over and over. A new language is evolving and that’s what I want to explore.”
www.lisacreagh.com/