
A winged monkey —
Winged goats, monkeys with unicorn horns and squirrels with snake tails - Joan Fontcuberta's imagination has stunned audiences and deceived experts. Here, a monkey with wings and a unicorn's horn, supposedly found in an archive belonging to the fictional Dr Peter Ameisenhaufen.

Centaurus neandertalensis —
In this picture of a "four-legged baboon", another curious creature to emerge from the archives of Ameisenhaufen.

A 'real' mermaid fossil —
Tail of a fish, head of a man?! More double-take fodder from Fontcuberta, exploiting our tendency to take "photographic evidence" at face-value.

'The Miracle of Dolphin Surfing' —
Fontcuberta satirizes religious faith in this picture, The Miracle of Dolphin Surfing, in which he depicts himself as a miracle-working monk.

A monk practices levitation —
These photos were actually part of a trip Fontcuberta took to "expose" a Finnish monastery that practices the impossible.

'Rare' plant species —
These incredible plants would look at home in a tropical forest or wild jungle. Influenced by the work of Karl Blossfeldt, these exotic-looking plants are made from an amalgamation of inorganic material, mimicking what may be found in uncharted territory.

Fantastical landscapes made from glitches —
This eerie, cinematic scenery emerged from misinformation being fed into cartographical software, often used by geographers and the military.

A dusty sky? —
Dust specs from a car windscreen double up as constellations in these photograms, where an ordinary inconvenience mimics the fantastical.

A feat in evolutionary theory —
A diver supposedly finds the another skeleton of a fish-like animal with a humanoid skull.