Sunday, April 10, 2016

Math+Art

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMmq5B1LKDg

I really enjoyed looking over this week's lecture about Math and Art video. I enjoyed it because i can easily relate to it due to the fact my grandpa is an architect and I used to always go to work with him when i was little. I was fascinated by all the shapes and math that makes architecture what it is. It's definitely not an easy job to have and I used to make it hard on my grandpa by messing up all his drawings and all his plans! Math and art are the fundamentals of architecture.  You need math in order to precisely size the buildings you help build and you need art for your drawing to make your plan come to life.


http://flavorwire.com/330293/10-amazing-examples-of-architecture-inspired-by-mathematics

A picture of a building plan for an architect

                                        
                                   The Parthenon in Greece                                              Mona Lisa

The Golden Rectangle is brought to light in the lecture video below. I found this quite interesting because even though i see these two images above quite often, I never noticed the patterns they possess. Math plays a huge part in art, It makes it proportional and just overall makes a picture or building better. In the lecture video, the professor describes how important proportions are to a art.  The pyramids of Giza would have never been able to be created without mathematical calculations, its such a beautiful sight!This idea the Golden Rectangle is vital to the subjects of Math and Art.

                                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMmq5B1LKDg
                                       

Pyramids of Giza

http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/emat6680/parveen/Math_and_Art.htm

In the reading called "Flatland" by Edwin A. Abbott, Abbott describes angles and how points of views are vital. In Part 1, Section 1, he talks about how things further away from us seem more transverse and flat but if you actually get closer to it, it looks way different.  When i was little, i used to play outside in a field, it was pretty big sometimes when things looked flat from a distance and then when you finally go up to it its much more detailed and not flat. i used think that was so cool!Perspective is key in the way we see things, and it matters.


         http://www.ibiblio.org/eldritch/eaa/F01.HTM
An idea of "Flatland"


Citation:  

Parveen, Nihkat. "MATHEMATICS AND ART." MATHEMATICS AND ART. The University of Georgia, 2008. Web. 10 Apr. 2016.
Abbott, Edwin A. "Section 1 Of the Nature of Flatland." 1, Flatland, by E. A. Abbott, 1884. Princeton University, 1991. Web. 10 Apr. 2016.
Nastasi, Alison. "10 Amazing Examples of Architecture Inspired by Mathematics." Flavorwire 10 Amazing Examples of Architecture Inspired ByMathematics Comments. Flavorwire, 20 Sept. 2012. Web. 10 Apr. 2016.




3 comments:

  1. I really liked how you chose to bring in an anecdotal example for the introduction of your blog. I was never personally introduced to architecture as a child so I never truly understood just how huge of a role math plays in architecture. I also like how you discussed how vital proportionality is to art and buildings. It is something that is vital to a piece. And like you said, if many great works throughout history ignored math, they would not be nearly as amazing as they are. Flatland was also a great addition to the blog. I think it is really cool how our perspective can change so much about the set physical properties of an object. Excellent blog!

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  2. i find the golden rectangle so interesting. now that i've learned about it, i can apply it to so many art pieces. nice blog!

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  3. Hey, Nathan!

    I like what you do here by expressing the idea of Math and Art throughout your blog in a few separate distinct ways. Your examples evaluate the ideas on a couple different levels, and it is nice to see how Math and Art can manifest on an everyday scale and on a known artistic scale.

    However, I feel like your analysis of the involvement of Math in Art does not delve deeply into the substance. These explanations scratch the surface, but I feel you could get a more powerful point across by delving deeper into the technical involvement of math in each of these scenarios.

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