We propose a visual and pedagogical analogy — the gravitational kaleidoscope — for the self-similar hierarchy of subrings that constitute the photon ring of a black hole. The repeated, demagnified, and rotated images observed by a distant observer resemble the infinite nested patterns generated by mirrors in a classical kaleidoscope. However, unlike discrete optical reflections, these images arise from null geodesics executing successive near-critical orbits around the unstable photon shell in curved spacetime. In exact Kerr spacetime the hierarchy is self-similar yet integrable; chaotic and fractal structures in phase space emerge only under deformations away from Kerr. A minimal iterated-map toy model is presented to illustrate the correspondence with the first-return map and exponential demagnification. The analogy is heuristic and not intended as dynamical equivalence.
Zhanat Alimkhojayeva (Mon,) studied this question.