Four Seasons of Botanic Digital Kaleidoscopic Art

Detail of a piece of digital botanic art, entitled Hocus Crocus, based on a photograph of crocusses in springtime
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Apparently I needed some extra color during the past lockdown winter. That’s the only way I can explain the explosion of colorful works of art that sprouted from my laptop during those months. I already wrote about the Icelandic impressions; also the European flag project and the Rotterdam paintifications were given a nudge in the right direction. But the greatest avalanche of new work came from the domain of Kaleidoscopia. An infinite source of botanic art, made with a “digital kaleidoscope” and based of photos of nature from all seasons.

Summer Garden

Beautiful shapes

The kaleidoscope was invented in 1815 by the Scottish physicist Sir David Brewster. He devised a tubular instrument with pieces of colored glass on one side, a viewing opening on the other side and in between two mirrors, placed at an angle to each other, creating eye-pleasing patterns. The word kaleidoscope comes from the Greek words kalos (beautiful), eidos (shape) and skopein (to look), so it’s just an instrument for looking at beautiful shapes, nothing more, nothing less.

Dyson Sphere


Photoshop

I don’t use pieces of colored glass as source material, but photos of flowers, blossoms, leaves and other natural phenomena. And instead of mirrors, I enlist the help of Photoshop to copy, flip, rotate those images and overlay them with transparency. But the end goal is the same: creating beautiful shapes to look at.

Grape Hyacinth

I have written eight scripts, actions in Photoshop language. They transform the original photos, each according to a different formula, into semi-abstract, geometric, botanical, kaleidoscopic works of art. Into something completely new: a blend of nature and mathematics. Although it must be noted mathematics is in fact a part of nature as well.

Fruit Salad

Sometimes elements from the original photo can still be recognized in the final result; often it is mainly the colors that give character to the work. And chance generates a fascinating interaction of polygons, circles, stars and other shapes. With a multitude of associations: from Art Nouveau to Mediterranean tiling and from Indian temples to Disneyland. After all, nature and geometry have always inspired artists throughout the ages.

Urban Springtime

Swirl

In fact, not all of these works of art are kaleidoscopic as Brewster intended. Some scripts rely more on rotation than mirroring; they produce works with a swirl, as in a vortex, a tornado, or a galaxy. And I don’t think you could do that with two mirrors in a tube. But kaleidoscopic or not, these works are nevertheless very kalos, in my humble opinion.

The Wind’s Five Quarters / The Wind’s Seven Quarters

Relief

As a finishing touch, I give the artworks a suggestion of relief. A 3d effect; after all, the name of my company is 3develop for a reason. As if I personally threw thick blobs of paint onto the canvas, after which a mysterious solidification process has resulted in spectacular textures.

Hocus Crocus

Entitled

I think it’s a sign of unbelievable weakness to call an artwork “no title”. So I often spend days thinking about good names for my pieces of botanic art. Sometimes the Latin name of the plant in question turns out to be perfectly adequate (Echinacea Purpurea), sometimes Google Translate points me to a good-sounding title in Spanish (Nenúfares Rosados), Indonesian (Kantong Semar) or Japanese (Iroha Momiji). Sometimes the link is more associative (Fruit Salad, Dyson Sphere). And sometimes a word joke will do the job (Hocus Crocus, Pentagonia Dreaming)

Pentagonia Dreaming

Seasons

This video shows my most beautiful kaleidoscopic works. It takes the viewer along through all seasons of the year: from spring to summer, autumn and winter, with a side trip to a tropical greenhouse and a flower shop and finally back to springtime.

Museum

Digital art is nice, but it would look even better in a large format in an analog museum. Maybe some day…. For now I already put some pieces on the walls of the virtual Kaleimuseum.

The Kalei Museum of Botanic Art

Gallery

And of course there is the online gallery below, powered by OhMyPrints. In it, all kaleidoscopies can be admired and, if desired, be ordered in any desired format and with a wide choice of materials.

OhMyPrints ship to every adress in The Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, France and some adjacent European countries. If you live outside of that priviliged part of the world, don’t despair: I also have a webshop at Pixels.com, which delivers worldwide. And they also print on throw pillows, duvet covers, tote bags, coffee mugs, yoga mats, phone cases and beach towels.

Gate to Infinity in a yoga studio

By Frans Blok

My work explores the border regions of photography, painting and computer visuals. With my company 3Develop I do work in commission but I use the same techniques, skills and software to make free work. I am originally an architect and I live in Rotterdam; for that reason the architecture of that city is a major (but not the only) source of inspiration. But also travel to countries like Iceland and Britain, or walks in the Netherlands, provide much material. Seeing and showing quality and beauty, that is what my work is about.

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