
The Microscopic World of Diatom Art
THE DIATOMIST is a short documentary about Klaus Kemp, master of the Victorian art of diatom arrangement. Diatoms are single cell algae that create jewel-like diatom art arrangements. Diatoms, a form of algae, are invisible to the naked eye. But when placed under a microscope, the symmetrical organisms offer grand displays of nature’s remarkable form of art.
When Diatom Art Makes You Run For Cover
Diatom Art is magnificent and really tiny Share on X
A few Things about Diatom Art that your Teachers won’t Tell You
Diatoms are single cell algae that create jewel-like glass shells around themselves. Microscopists of the Victorian era would arrange them into complex patterns, invisible to the naked eye but spectacular when viewed under magnification.The best of these arrangements are stunning technical feats that reveal the hidden grandeur of some of the smallest organisms on Earth.
Klaus Kemp has devoted his entire life to understanding and perfecting diatom arrangement and he is now acknowledged as the last great practitioner of this beautiful combination of art and science. THE DIATOMIST showcases his incredible art work.
Soundtrack by Ryuichi Sakamoto, Bernard Herrmann and Cults Percussion Ensemble.
MATTHEW KILLIP is an English filmmaker living in New York. His documentaries have been broadcast on UK television and exhibited in festivals including Sundance and True/False.

Exploring the known and the unknown with a beat writer’s eye for truth. –Chip Von Gunten
A quick overview of the topics covered in this article.
Latest articles
The Algorithm Doesn’t Love You Back
The algorithm doesn’t love you. It doesn’t hate you either—it just wants attention. Every click, pause, and scroll is a data point. You’re not [read more...]
Weird 3I/ATLAS Comet Behaves Like a Death Star
Some comets glide harmlessly through space. Then there’s 3I/ATLAS—a cosmic misfit acting less like a snowball and more like a sci-fi villain. It doesn’t [read more...]
When Society is Gaslit by Advertising
We like to think we’re making choices, but advertising whispers otherwise. The products we buy, the trends we chase, the “perfect” lives we envy—sometimes [read more...]







