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Behind the drip. (Artifact).


DO JACKSON POLLOCK'S notorious post-war "drip" canvases--above is a detail from his famous Number 22--actually contain a bidden mathematical pattern? According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a story in Discover magazine, the physicist and art historian Richard Taylor Richard Taylor is the name of:
  • Richard Taylor (general) (1826–1879), Confederate general in the American Civil War
  • Richard Taylor (philosopher) (1919–2003), American metaphysician
 is convinced that they do. Taylor argues that Pollock's work is not the random visual chaos that his critics derided, but instead reflects the logic of chaos theory chaos theory, in mathematics, physics, and other fields, a set of ideas that attempts to reveal structure in aperiodic, unpredictable dynamic systems such as cloud formation or the fluctuation of biological populations.  and fractal geometry fractal geometry, branch of mathematics concerned with irregular patterns made of parts that are in some way similar to the whole, e.g., twigs and tree branches, a property called self-similarity or self-symmetry. . That is, unlike other spontaneous-drip artists, Pollock created canvases with a single dominant pattern that is repeated, at various magnifications, throughout.

As part of his research, Taylor has invented the "Pollockizer," a mechanical fractal-drip device. Of course, whether Pollock intended his fractal results is unknown. What is demonstrable de·mon·stra·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of being demonstrated or proved: demonstrable truths.

2. Obvious or apparent: demonstrable lies.
 are the repeated patterns, the eye's preference for such subtle variation over both visual disorder and plane geometric regularity, and a far greater continuing interest in Pollock than in any of his spontaneous paint-throwing imitators.

Art has always developed in close conjunction with science and math. Renaissance perspective requires the idea of infinity, and thus of zero. Impressionists painted not objects, but light. Artists have had to be chemists, physicists, and mathematicians Mathematicians by letter: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z See also
  • Requested mathematicians articles
  • (by country, etc.)
  • List of physicists
External links
 in order to be artists at all. As for Pollock, he may not have been working with fractals in mind, but as Discover notes, his work may nevertheless be "testing the limits of what the human eye would find aesthetically pleasing."
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Title Annotation:art historian studies Jackson Pollock's "drip technique" for regualr patterns
Author:Freund, Charles Paul
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2002
Words:226
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