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The project for him was an aesthetic examination of color, form and movement, but the natural human response to snakes -- good or bad -- adds another layer of meaning for the viewer.
Laita paid a price for beauty: He was bitten by one of his models, a deadly black mamba snake. Luckily for him, it was a nonvenomous dry bite, which he inadvertently caught on film the moment it happened.
Other snakes in the photo exhibit include a blue Malaysian coral snake, an emerald tree boa, a Brazilian rainbow boa constrictor and the aptly named beautiful pit viper, boasting its neon pink and green scales.
"Could you ever make a creature like that up in your wildest dreams?" Sontchi said of the viper, which also is the cover snake of Laita's book. "Who would ever think that nature could be so bodacious? It's got so much more imagination than we do."
Before "Serpentine," Laita similarly explored creatures of the deep for his book "Sea" and has done extensive work for big-name commercial clients in addition to fine art. The U.S. Postal Service issued stamps featuring a series of his floral photographs in 2007.
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