Father’s Day Fractals
Today we’re paying tribute to the father of fractals, Benoit Mandelbrot. Thanks for all the trippy geometry Benoit!
Explore more of Mandelbrot’s fractals →
8 years ago
Father’s Day Fractals
Today we’re paying tribute to the father of fractals, Benoit Mandelbrot. Thanks for all the trippy geometry Benoit!
Explore more of Mandelbrot’s fractals →
8 years ago
9 years ago
A friend and colleague on Mandelbrot:
“Of course he used his office computer for email, but he did very little programming… The walls of his office were covered with posters of Mandelbrot Sets and fractal art. He had piles of books and papers on the floor, on his desk, and on various tables. But his memory was great. If asked him about any aspect of fractals, he could go to the correct pile and retrieve a relevant document.”
As told by IBM Researcher Dr. James Wynne in a Reddit AMA:
Read more:
We worked with fractal pioneer Benoit Mandelbrot at IBM and Yale Univ. AMA
9 years ago




“I conceived and developed a new geometry of nature and implemented its use in a number of diverse fields. It describes many of the irregular and fragmented patterns around us, and leads to full-fledged theories, by identifying a family of shapes I call fractals.”
Benoît Mandelbrot
Fractals Discoverer
IBM Fellow Emeritus
9 years ago


While the blueprints of nature have existed since… well… the beginning of time, the fractal math revealing these hidden patterns was only discovered in the 1970s. But that didn’t stop software designer and fractal enthusiast Ken Shirriff from bending time to generate a classic Mandelbrot fractal on a 50-year-old IBM 1401 mainframe. Running antique punch cards, Ken had to wait 12 long minutes for the heavy-duty scientific calculation job to complete, thanks to a 15-second CPU delay for each printed row! Yes, a completely impractical, yet utterly ingenious undertaking. We love the way your mind works, Ken. And thanks for the photos. Nerd out on the deets →
9 years ago
“Round about the accredited and orderly facts of every science there ever floats a sort of dust-cloud of exceptional observations, of occurrences minute and irregular and seldom met with, which it always proves more easy to ignore than to attend to.”
Benoît Mandelbrot
Fractals Discoverer
IBM Fellow Emeritus
9 years ago
Big Brains. Small Films.
Benoît Mandelbrot, The Father of Fractals
In his final interview shot by filmmaker Errol Morris, Mandelbrot shares his love for math and how it led him to his wondrous discovery of fractals.
9 years ago



“The most complex object in mathematics, the Mandelbrot Set … is so complex as to be uncontrollable by mankind and describable as “chaos.”
Benoît Mandelbrot
Fractals Discoverer
IBM Fellow Emeritus
9 years ago
All throughout his birthday week, we’re looking back at the life and boundless legacy of IBMer Benoît Mandelbrot and his enchanting math discovery of fractals! So keep watch for new generative artwork (thanks Gwen Vanhee!) and explore more from our award-winning fractal series:
• Transform your tumblr into fractals (for desktop and tablet)
• Read the Reddit AMA with Benoît’s Yale U. and IBM colleagues
• Watch Mandelbrot’s last interview with Errol Morris
9 years ago
The PLAY Experiments | No. 4
When you open your mind to Play, there’s always more than meets the eye. Take ferro fluid, a solution with tiny particles of magnetic iron, originally invented as printer toner. But remix it with some speakers and—boom. Sound becomes sight in beautiful, pulsating fractals. This one goes out to the late, great IBMer and Father of Fractals
Happy Birthday Benoit Mandelbrot!
10 years ago