Art and BZ
Science and art have always shared methods and tools. Much as photography invaded the fine arts a century ago, we today witness the evolution of fascinating computer art, a form of art which draws on the visualisation of quantitative scientific data. The easy transition from two-dimensional to three-dimensional, perspective images illustrates the invasion of computer technology, which readily permits what men have dreamed of since Kepler and Dürer. Today, we are surprised by the aesthetic content of visualized "cold" scientific experiments and mathematical models and theories, and we discover that we can project scientific information into the language of art. This provides an aestheticized, and this humanized, representation of most complex scientific phenomena, which leads us into a new world of imagination and creativity.