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South terminator of 7 day moonby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
31" x 25" Framed Photograph Frame
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Omega Centauri globular clusterby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
33" x 24" Framed Photograph Frame
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23 day old waning moonby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
30" x 41" Framed Art Frame
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Last quarter waning moonby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
30" x 41" Framed Art Frame
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Delphinus constellation on a hazy nightby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
41" x 30" Framed Photograph Frame
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Pegasus constellation in the northern skyby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
41" x 30" Framed Photograph Frame
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constellation of Leo and the Coma Star Cluster in Coma Berenicesby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
41" x 30" Framed Photograph Frame
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first diamond ring during the total eclipse of the Sunby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
41" x 30" Framed Photograph Frame
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Quarter Moonby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
34" x 37" Framed Art Frame
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Waning moon seriesby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
45" x 28" Framed Art Frame
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7 Day Old First Quarter Moonby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
23" x 24" Framed Art Frame
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14 Day Old Moon With South Polar Regionby Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images
21" x 21" Framed Art Frame
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Alan Dyer (Born in 1944) was born in Nelson, Lancashire. Dyer attended Whitefield Secondary School and then went for business training with CRS Ltd., a training that took him five years. After completion of the training, he went on to study fine art at Bristol Polytechnic, Burnley School of Art, and the University of Reading. In the early 1970s Dyer studied psychology at the University of Reading and he gained Master of Philosophy for research into the psychology of pictorial & symbolic form and perception. He then proceeded to the University of Birmingham Medical School where he carried out research on visual perception at examining the visual form perception underlying neural mechanisms. Dyer also carried out research to find out what role drawing played in developmental psychology at the medical school. After that he again spent another six months at Barnsley Hall psychiatric hospital, Bromsgrove studying the potential of art as a therapeutic and diagnostic tool. After all these he got a job as a university lecturer and worked for 24 years, teaching courses on the ideology and psychology of art while at the same time continuing to produce and exhibit drawings and paintings. His text-based drawings investigate the connections between visual language and psychological theories and in his paintings he employs free-association techniques. His research on knowledge structures, navigational metaphors and computer-based hypertext systems has been published widely. He left teaching in 1997 to concentrate on painting, writing and research. Currently, he’s the financial director and chairman of Coventry Canal Basin Trust Ltd. Framed Alan Dyer art is a clear testimony of his dedication to his work.