Press "Enter" to skip to content

Earl Einhorn: Making magic with digital art

BY CLAYTON PATTERSON | Earl Einhorn has become a hermit living hidden in a forest of color digital prints with unlimited color choices. Pure color, millions of choices. How did this cultural isolation happen?

He is a mathematician and not a fine artist. Consequently, he never got into that game. He has never been in the art world, except for, since 1980, collecting Axel the Jeweler’s silver creations. One of Axel’s silver bracelet arm sculpture pieces he was able, through Leslie Barany, to get into the HR Giger Museum. Yet, here he is day and night toiling away at making art.

Earl Einhorn in his studio. (Photo by Clayton Patterson)

As a young, gutsy mathematician starting off working at the Equitable life insurance company, Earl met with the head people and said he could tackle streamlining a number system that could be done on the new IBM System/360 computer. Equitable life owned the whole building on 51st St. The basic computer in those early days took up the entire 16th floor. Today, a laptop computer can hold much more content and do an infinitely greater number of actions than the floor-sized giant could do.

A high-resolution digital picture by Earl Einhorn. (Courtesy Earl Einhorn)

By the early 1990s, Earl was involved in color digital printing, making fractal designs, but found them too limited and predicable with the swirl-pattern look. There was no way that digital printing was going to be accepted as a fine art. The printers had a very limited color palette, and the inks were such that the colors would fade, unless the print was smeared with a toxic, smelly lacquer.

With practice, persistence and his mathematics background, Earl produced the first color printed canvas because he was one of the first to use the 20K printer. He developed a high-resolution program to print 15K pixel.

Earl Einhorn was an early pioneer in large-size, high-resolution digital art. (Courtesy Earl Einhorn)

Talking to Earl can get very technical, like jumping into the deep end of the pool, so here he explains the process in his own words:

“I was a computer programmer for Equitable life insurance in 1968 writing actuarial programs. I took this knowledge and started to write Fortran programs to make art around 1989 and produced various T-shirt designs dated 1991. These were only in black and white. The Microsoft platform only had black and white at that time.

“Eventually, full-color came around and I could use all the colors of the computer. Two hundred and fifty-six shades of red, green and blue. This gave around 16.7 million different colors — 256 by 256 by 256 — and you could do great shading.

Earl Einhorn at work in his studio. (Photo by Clayton Patterson)

“By writing my own programs, I found a way of making extreme-resolution pictures about 12,000 pixels in width, with longer lengths up to 24,000 pixels.

“I wanted to print my pictures on canvas and had to wait for the Epson 9880 printer to come along with pigmented ink. Before that, you had to use dye-sublimation printers, whose pictures had to be lacquered.

“The resolution I use of 12,000 by 15,000 pixels could give me a print 40 inches by 50 inches printed at 300 DPI. That is much more dense than 4K, which is 3,840 by 2,160! Around 22 times more dense. No one in the world is even close!

“My largest pictures I print at 300 DPI with the use of 16.7 million colors. My highest-resolution pictures are 12,000 by 24,000 pixels and would print 40 inches by 80 inches at 300 DPI.

Earl Einhorn uses his math background and picks from a palette of millions of colors to create his digital art. (Courtesy Earl Einhorn)

“I was first published in Computer Graphics World where they gave me a two-page feature spread. Computer Graphics World is the premier computer-graphics mag in the world. They featured me four times. There was no one else.

“Digital art is finally being considered fine art. I was the first making large canvases that were perfect technically and looked like a painting! My pictures aren’t bad, either. I spend many, many hours in Photoshop trying to make magic and make a picture that is way beyond! I use various multidimensional techniques to give various illusions, depending on how the picture is looked at.”

Earl’s major ambition now is to get digital art recognized as art.

Looks like art to me and, no question, it is beautiful.

4 Comments

  1. Judy Eisman Judy Eisman August 19, 2022

    Hi Earl. So happy you followed your dreams.Your art is amazing.
    Best Always
    Judy Weinstein Eisman

  2. tammi marchini tammi marchini September 22, 2021

    Earl, your art is truly amazing. Everyone needs to own a piece of history 💗May your works be spread far and wide around the world 🙏

  3. Julian Julian May 27, 2021

    I think the more recent works which seem to rely heavily on a large central ‘face’ to ground the images have run their course now….it’s getting somehwat predictable and samey. These older, other pieces are really interesting though.

  4. Crystal Flax Crystal Flax February 29, 2020

    These are really beautiful pictures. Super interesting how he uses his math background to make art.

Leave a Reply

Mission News Theme by Compete Themes.