Dark Matter (2014), by the artistic collaborative Troika, manages to be a circle, a hexagon, and a square all at once.
The same group had created Squaring the Circle a year earlier.
Dark Matter (2014), by the artistic collaborative Troika, manages to be a circle, a hexagon, and a square all at once.
The same group had created Squaring the Circle a year earlier.
If I roll three dice and multiply the three resulting numbers together, what is the probability that the product will be odd?
American furniture artist Wendell Castle’s 1978 Chair With Sports Coat is really neither — it’s an eye-deceiving sculpture carved from maple.
In 1895 French writer Georges Polti drew up a list of every dramatic situation that might arise in a story or performance, based on an earlier list drawn up by Venetian playwright Carlo Gozzi. They number only 36 — Polti listed the elements necessary for each:
Each situation has its variations; for example, The Count of Monte Cristo is a Revenge for a False Accusation, a variation on the Crime Pursued by Vengeance; and Great Expectations is a Life Sacrificed for the Happiness of a Relative or Loved One, a variation on Self-Sacrifice for Kindred.
“Van Gogh Observes” by Joe Fafard. Found outside Mayberry Fine Art in downtown Toronto. from r/Damnthatsinteresting
This sculpture, by Canadian artist Joe Fafard, has been scrutinizing passersby on Dundas Street in Toronto.
The principle is somewhat the same as Binary Arts’ mistrustful dragon.
A puzzle by Joseph Horton, from MIT Technology Review, January-February 1999:
If the sun takes two minutes to set, what angle does it subtend from Earth?
In 1759, ghostly rappings started up in the house of a parish clerk in London. In the months that followed they would incite a scandal against one man, an accusation from beyond the grave. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast we’ll tell the story of the Cock Lane ghost, an enduring portrait of superstition and justice.
We’ll also see what you can get hit with at a sporting event and puzzle over some portentous soccer fields.
hortulan
adj. of or belonging to a garden
micacious
adj. sparkling, shining
bumfuzzle
v. to astound or bewilder
asomatous
adj. having no material body
Artist Gary Drostle designed this trompe l’oeil mosaic for a public garden in Croydon in 1996.
He calls it “the ideal low maintenance fishpond.”
If you’re sharing a pizza with another person, there’s no need to cut it into precisely equal slices. Make four cuts at equal angles through an arbitrary point and take alternate slices, and you’ll both get the same amount of pizza.
Larry Carter and Stan Wagon came up with this “proof without words”: Each piece in an odd-numbered sector corresponds to a congruent piece in an even-numbered sector, and vice versa.
Also: If a pizza has thickness a and radius z, then its volume is pi z z a.
(Larry Carter and Stan Wagon, “Proof Without Words: Fair Allocation of a Pizza,” Mathematics Magazine 67:4 [October 1994], 267-267.)
Sculptor Anna Coleman Ladd found an unusual application for her artistry during World War I, creating prostheses for the dramatic injuries produced by machine guns and heavy artillery. After reading about artist Francis Derwent Wood’s “Tin Noses Shop” in London, she moved to London and opened a “Studio for Portrait-Masks.”
Her copper and silver masks, 1/32″ thick and weighing 4-9 ounces, were founded on facial casts and painted to match the precise skin tone of each patient. Held in place by eyeglasses, many included realistic mustaches, eyebrows, and eyelashes. By the end of 1919 Ladd had created 185 of them, charging $18 for each and donating her own services. The Red Cross called them “miracles,” and in 1932 France made her a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour.