Hidden Harmony: The Connected Worlds of Physics and Art

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JHU Press, 30.07.2008 - 160 Seiten

Most "art and science" books focus on the science of perspective or the psychology of perception. Hidden Harmony does not. Instead, the book addresses the surprising common ground between physics and art from a novel and personal perspective. Viewing the two disciplines as creative processes, J.R. Leibowitz supplements existing and original research with illustrations to demonstrate that physics and art share guiding aesthetics and compositional demands and to show how each speaks meaningfully to the other.

Hidden Harmony is the first serious look at what art and physics, as creative processes, have in common. Without assuming a background either in art or physics, the author widens our experience and understanding of both domains by exploring how concepts such as balance and re-balance, coherence and unity, and symmetry and broken symmetry affect and are affected by artistic vision and scientific principle. He reveals shared themes and understandings in each field and adroitly illustrates the parallels between the strategies guiding the dabs of color and layers of images in a work of art and those guiding the assembly of physical evidence into models of the physical world.

Featuring examples of paintings and sculptures and complementary examples of physical concepts, this contemplative work helps us see art and physics as artists and physicists do.

 

Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

CONTENTS Preface
The Minds Eye as Interpreter
What Is Saved and
What Is Broken and
The Balance of Shapes
Some Visual Elements in
Searching for Light
Einsteins Relativity and the Escape from Relativism
Form in Impressionism and Postimpressionism
Cubism and the Expanding Horizon
The Growing Circle of Understanding
Notes
Index
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (2008)

J. R. Leibowitz is an emeritus professor of physics and former chairman of the art department at the Catholic University of America. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society.

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