Arts Thread

Ann-Kathrin Peuthen
Communication Design MA

Hochschule Düsseldorf Peter Behrens School of Arts

Specialisms: Illustration / Digital Design / Graphic Design

Location: Düsseldorf, Germany

ann-kathrin-peuthen1 ArtsThread Profile
Hochschule Düsseldorf Peter Behrens School of Arts

Ann-Kathrin Peuthen

Ann-Kathrin Peuthen ArtsThread Profile

First Name: Ann-Kathrin

Last Name: Peuthen

Specialisms: Illustration / Digital Design / Graphic Design

Sectors:

My Location: Düsseldorf, Germany

University / College: Hochschule Düsseldorf Peter Behrens School of Arts

Course / Program Title: Communication Design MA

About

Ann-Kathrin Peuthen is a communication design graduate from Düsseldorf with a strong interest in biology and mathematics. She researches various natural phenomena, such as fractal mathematics, patterns in nature, and other occurrences. Through a multidisciplinary approach, she combines illustration and traditional book art with the creative use of technology.

Why does something exist rather than nothing? Why do so many shapes and patterns appear in nature? At first glance, the universe may seem chaotic, but beneath this apparent chaos lie numerous regularities and laws that create patterns and structures that can be described mathematically. The British mathematician Alan Turing‘s theory of morphogenesis, detailed in his 1952 work „The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis,“ explains how an organism‘s physical form develops and changes over time through biological processes. MorphoGenesis illuminates Turing‘s discoveries by exploring the emergence of organic forms and the recurring patterns found in nature through an experimental approach. Through this exploration, a new creation story unfolds within a „digital primordial soup“, where new digital beings emerge step by step. Two distinct visual languages were developed to represent these findings: colorful visual worlds from the „digital petri dish“ and black-and-white illustrations for the schematic representation of the individual stages of development. To create a spatial distinction between these two areas, the flaps created by the French-Fold binding were folded in.