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Fractal Art By Raj Mathur Pack
up your easel, palette and paintbrushes. Turn, instead, to the mouse and the PC.
Just a few clicks away, lies pixel art that arises from fractals or geometric
figures. Fragmented, irregular and magical, it takes you to a whole new world.
A world where there is beauty in form, rhythm in color, order in chaos
Fractal geometry was accidentally discovered about two decades ago by mathematician
Benoit Mandelbrot,
who was born in Warsaw, and later shifted to the US, where he worked at IBM. While
plotting the imaginary values of the square root of minus one, Mandelbrot found
beautiful patterns and shapes that repeated themselves in different scales-like
the shape of a tree is mimicked by the branch, the branch by the twig, the twig
by the leaf.
The art of fractals is both simple and complicated. Simple,
because, given the right mix of software, hardware and imagination, even the guy
next door can easily work at producing them. Complex, simply because if you take
a fractal, zoom into a small part, and then blow it up, you find the new picture
is at least as complicated as its original. The basic pattern of the fractal is
repeated, but, with each repetition, the pattern differs slightly.
The
beauty of the whole process is that this continues however deep you zoom into
the fractal. This form of art is used by musicians. It is also used by economists,
geologists, filmmakers and, of course, by computer enthusiasts such as Raj Mathur
who has generated the images that you are seeing here.
Compact
discs of readymade fractals are readily available on the market. But Mathur works
from a fractal program and a set of formulae to evoke these beautiful images.
So, in a sense, he has technically generated them. He is, however, quick to give
credit to the original authors of the formulae-Michael Coddington, Ian Adma, Richard
Hughes, Pieter Branderhorst, Scott Taylor and Ethan Nagel.
Says cyber
junkie Mathur whose social life seems to be restricted to the computer: "Fractals
are absolutely fascinating. If my math were better, I would have learnt more about
them. But, even without math, I am quite happy to generate and view them."