The video below is a fractal. It is also three dimensional. It has also been rendered from two different locations very close to each other. Therefore, you can also see it in three dimensions.
If you're not used to using YouTube's 3d capabilities then don't worry, this guy has a tutorial video explaining how to see the full three-dimensionality of the video without the need for glasses. It's just like magic eye in reverse, basically (though I'm not sure how good it is for your eye muscles).
If you liked that you should read the description of how the Mandelbulb was discovered. The Mandelbulb was made by people looking for a three dimensional analogue of the well known Mandelbrot set. If you don't know what the Mandelbrot set is, first watch this video, then read about what you just saw at Wikipedia.
None of the Mandelbulb, or the Mandelbrot set or the 3d fractal (a Mandelbox) shown above were designed by a human mind. All of the complexity found in the images comes about from defining structures in two or three dimensional space as the set of points that are or are not solutions to relatively simple mathematical algorithms. For example, the algorithm describing the Mandelbrot set can be described in just one line:
"... the Mandelbrot set is the set of values of c in the complex plane for which the orbit of 0 under iteration of the complex quadratic polynomial \(z_{n+1} = z_n^2 + c\) remains bounded".All of the complexity you can see in the entire ten minutes of the Mandelbrot set video I linked to above is defined in that one simple sentence.
Twitter: @just_shaun