by Mattmovies » Mon Dec 13, 2010 4:58 pm
Inspiring work, thank you for this.
In regards, math and art: I think an artist has to make some early decisions regarding the precision of a work of art. Either an artist is going to make a piece mathematically correct or purposely not in a stylized way. The two can be mixed, but there have to be some ground rules for how that works.
For instance, if I was to try to combine three photographs from three different places, I'd need to make note of the lens being used, all of the settings on the camera, the precise angle and measure the distances from the subject if I hoped to achieve something that the eye would see as natural. It's funny that to most people math doesn't come naturally, but if they see a work of art that has a line in the wrong place mathematically, they spot it. It loses its realism. Maybe that's the genius of artists that can make you see mathematically "correct" images that couldn't exist, like Escher.