Visual Culture and Mathematics in the Early Modern Period
Series: Visual Culture in Early Modernity;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 23 January 2017
- ISBN 9781138679382
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages214 pages
- Size 246x174 mm
- Weight 657 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 36 Illustrations, black & white; 36 Halftones, black & white 0
Categories
Short description:
This volume makes its contribution by offering new interdisciplinary approaches that not only investigate perspective, but also examine how mathematics enriched aesthetic theory and the human mind.
MoreLong description:
During the early modern period there was a natural correspondence between how artists might benefit from the knowledge of mathematics and how mathematicians might explore, through advances in the study of visual culture, new areas of enquiry that would uncover the mysteries of the visible world. This volume makes its contribution by offering new interdisciplinary approaches that not only investigate perspective but also examine how mathematics enriched aesthetic theory and the human mind. The contributors explore the portrayal of mathematical activity and mathematicians as well as their ideas and instruments, how artists displayed their mathematical skills and the choices visual artists made between geometry and arithmetic, as well as Euclid’s impact on drawing, artistic practice and theory. These chapters cover a broad geographical area that includes Italy, Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, France and England. The artists, philosophers and mathematicians whose work is discussed include Leon Battista Alberti, Nicholas Cusanus, Marsilio Ficino, Francesco di Giorgio, Leonardo da Vinci and Andrea del Verrocchio, as well as Michelangelo, Galileo, Piero della Francesca, Girard Desargues, William Hogarth, Albrecht Dürer, Luca Pacioli and Raphael.
"The book represents well the different ways in which art and mathematics became closely intertwined during the Renaissance, and how one discipline became an inspiration for the other. It builds on previous work by Martin Kemp, Judith Field and Alexander Marr and deserves a place in every collection interested in the relations of art and mathematics."
--British Journal for the History of Mathematics
"This book is an important scholarly contribution to the history of early modern art and its relation to science and mathematics."
--The British Journal for the History of Science
MoreTable of Contents:
1. Introduction
Ingrid Alexander-Skipnes
Part I: The Mathematical Mind and the Search for Beauty
2. Renaissance Aesthetics and Mathematics
John Hendrix
3. Design Method and Mathematics in Francesco di Giorgio’s Trattati
Angeliki Pollali
4. Mathematical and Proportion Theories in the Work of Leonardo da Vinci and Contemporary Artist/Engineers at the Turn of the Sixteenth Century
Matthew Landrus
Part II: Artists as Mathematicians
5. Durer’s Underweysung der Messung and the Geometric Construction of Alphabets
Rangsook Yoon
6. Circling the Square: The Meaningful Use of Φ and Π in the Paintings of Piero della Francesca
Perry Brooks
Part III: Euclid and Artistic Accomplishment
7. The Point and Its Line: An Early Modern History of Movement
Caroline O. Fowler
8. Between the Golden Ratio and a Semiperfect Solid: Fra Luca Pacioli and the Portrayal of Mathematical Humanism
Renzo Baldasso and John Logan
9. Mathematical Imagination in Raphael’s School of Athens
Ingrid Alexander-Skipnes
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