View allAll Photos Tagged recursive

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Starting from the japanese original, recursively feeding the outcome of a process where japanese and chinese are deliberately confused into Google translate and preserving the english outcomes which pleased me. The only editing is the omission of cycles or the odd sticky phrase.

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

While watching Funny People, they showed our TV (a Sharp Aquos flatscreen) on our TV *again*. This was the 2nd time during the movie.

 

Adam Sandler.

Sharp Aquos TV, TV, mermaid, merman, skull.

movie: Funny People.

recursive.

 

upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.

 

October 24, 2009.

  

... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com

... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com

 

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

Created with www.dumpr.net - fun with your photos

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Playing around with motion graphics tonight. Just a pure stream of conciousness invention during the course of the evening. Royalty free music from CCMixter.org: "Instead Of Writing A Letter" by Speck:

ccmixter.org/files/speck/53886

*******************************************************************************

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

*******************************************************************************

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Fungal entities that root into sorrowful minds.

 

Griefbinders are sentient, parasitic mycelial intelligences native to the emotional decay zones of Thornbleed Vale. Rather than consuming flesh, they root into the grief-nodes of conscious beings — memories of betrayal, regret, abandonment — and feed on their resonance.

 

Psychological Infiltration

 

Sympathetic Invasion: They do not attack physically. They empathize, echo, and expand sorrow until it consumes.

 

Spore of Reflection: Victims begin to hear their own regrets narrated back to them, reframed cruelly.

 

Cognition Mycelia: Neural filaments that bloom behind the eyes of the host, weaving memory and hallucination together.

 

🌿 Manifestation

 

Physical Description: Griefbinders resemble squat, low-slung creatures with bark-like skin crusted in fungal nodules and ringed caps. Their enormous, glassy black eyes dominate a skull-like face etched with natural ridges that suggest sorrowful expressions. A fringe of rootlike tendrils hangs beneath their head like a fungal beard. Their limbs are thick and clawed, not for attack, but for anchoring into the earth — or into you.

 

Roughly the size of a labrador — compact, sturdy, and unsettlingly present when still — large enough to loom, small enough to nestle beneath trees.

 

Moves with an unsettling stillness punctuated by twitchy, purposeful steps — as if every motion is filtered through the memory of loss. When it locks eyes with a target, it tilts its fungal head slightly, as if hearing a sorrow not yet spoken aloud.

 

Appear as lichenous growths, slowly shaping into silhouettes of people the host has lost or wronged.

 

Their form shifts with the emotional state of those nearby.

 

They emit a scent like rain on scorched stone — a memory you wish you forgot.

 

Their caps glisten with memory-sweat; veins run through their stalks like pulsing nerve-roots.

 

Tendrils move slowly, as if listening.

 

⚠️ Threats & Effects

 

Extended exposure causes emotional paralysis, recursive memory loops, and identity drift.

 

Some willingly bond with a Griefbinder to keep the memory of someone alive — at the cost of themselves.

 

Cannot be removed by force. Only release through truth, closure, or total emotional severance.

 

“They don’t feed on pain — they bloom through it.”

Introspectiva, siempre ella... sistemática.

[...de la fase 1 a la fase 2...]

*******************************************************************************

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

*******************************************************************************

Day Ninety-four, it's a Suicidal Bunny Day. Did you ever get stuck in internet? Like recursively checking for facebook updates, flickr stats, blog comments, website visits, incoming emails, forum post answers, new messages on chat, and so on?

 

365+1 Day of NEX-7 project

366nex.blogspot.com

 

www.lucarossini.it

www.facebook.com/LucaRossiniPhotographer

Using a new Mathmap formula, the results are a little better than before I think.

This is a photo of one of my circular saw blades (DeWalt 36 tooth tungsten carbide finishing saw, to be precise), distorted with MathMap. I liked the yellow paint on the blade edge since this is a fresh blade.

 

strobist: 1/4 power Sigma EF-500DG Super, eBay trigger, diffused

through white plexi--to get a nice specular sheen on the brushed steel--against velvet (my poor homage to the lighting work of ming thein's timepieces).

 

See it large here.

 

©2008 David C. Pearson, M.D.

 

Intended to be viewed Interactively -- use the mouse to pan, shift and ctrl keys zoom.

 

Details: This is an equirectangular projection of the Riemann sphere, with a p1=p2=1 Droste effect on it.

 

Original image thanks to gadl: chessboard. CC licensed.

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

Small tribute to a great genius.

A recursive Peirce Quincunial projection of this equirectangular panorama of a gallery in the Escher Museum in the Hague.

Click here to explore the Interactive view of the original panorama.

Arranging circles can make you meet angels.

I hope THIS tire last at least 100.000 miles!!!!

Recursive HDR to make machinery look like a parody of itself.

inside one of the turrets. it was pretty disconcerting to be able to look all the way down a spiral staircase, even though the hole was only about the size of a grapefruit.

with thanks to Josh Summers and the mathmap group

A new flower featuring recursive petals. (high res image)

 

Bizarre depiction of the Cretan monster. As a recursive frieze painted on the surface of Corinthian pots, this architectural frieze depicts the Minotaur inserted inside a parade between lions.

 

Moulded polychrome terracotta

(Height 22 cm; length 31 cm)

Half of 6th century BC

From Gabii near Rome

Rome, Museo Nazionale Romano

 

Exhibition “Monsters”

Roma, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme

  

From criss-crossing strands separating cells of colour emerges the figure of a walking man. Inspired by the intricate pattern of veins in butterfly wings, and reminiscent of stained glass windows, this visually engaging abstraction combines an organic feel with the boldness of graphic design.

Once again, Ada revisits Ada, who revisits Ada, who revisits Ada, who revisits Ada, who revisits Ada, tired now.

Folded from uncut squares in the same size.

 

The black one and the golden one are really the same with the only differece in the flaps updown or not.

 

The black one has wide blank around the recursive squares, so I narrowed the blank, then the silver one comes.

 

The golden yellow one is great different from the other three, its' back is also interesting. I cannot figure out its' folding sequence, so I summarize an equation: supposed n refers to the layer number, then the row number [m=8*2^(n-1)+2].

  

It's not easy for me to figure out the inwards folding sequence (the black/silver one) so that it can be folded from edges and can be folded all along provided the paper is large enough.

 

I always think about designing a model like hydrangea. Though it's not flower type as hydrangea, but I like it.

Not sure what happened here, while trying to recreate the Droste cocoa tin image

Playing around with applying the droste effect to a stereographic panorama.

1 2 ••• 12 13 15 17 18 ••• 79 80