Double Planetoid
Double Planetoid is a wood engraving print by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher, first printed in 1949.
Description
Double Planetoid is printed in four colors from four wood blocks.[1] It depicts a planetoid in the shape of a compound of two tetrahedra, interpenetrating each other to form a stellated octahedron.[2] One of the two tetrahedra is entirely covered by architecture, while the other is a wilderness populated by saurian creatures.[1] The planetoid is shown within a circular black field, 37.5 centimetres (14.8 in) in diameter.[3]
Themes
Double Planetoid is part of a series of Escher's prints from the 1940s and 1950s that depict small polyhedral planets, also including Gravitation (1952) and Tetrahedral Planetoid (1954),[4] and possibly in the same universe as his print Stars (1948).[1] It has thematic connections with other Escher prints from the same period that provide simultaneous views of intermingled worlds, including the more realistic prints Puddle (1952) and Three Worlds (1955),[5] and is one of many Escher works using the geometry of polyhedra and polyhedral compounds.[6]
Collections
Copies of the print are included in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of Canada,[7] the US National Gallery of Art,[8] and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.[3]
See also
- Tetrahedral hypothesis, the discredited scientific theory that the arrangement of the Earth's continents comes from the geometry of a tetrahedron
References
- ^ a b c Double Planetoid, Escher in the Palace, 2 December 2017, retrieved 2021-11-14
- ^ Coxeter, H. S. M. (1985), "A special book review: M. C. Escher: His life and complete graphic work", The Mathematical Intelligencer, 7 (1): 59–69, doi:10.1007/BF03023010, S2CID 189887063. See in particular p. 61.
- ^ a b "Double Planetoid, Maurits Cornelis Escher (Dutch, 1898–1972), 1949", Collections, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, retrieved 2021-11-14
- ^ Gravity, 1952, Escher in the Palace, 29 June 2018, retrieved 2021-11-14
- ^ Hofstadter, Douglas R. (2003), "Mystery, classicism, elegance: an endless chase after magic", in Schattschneider, Doris; Emmer, Michele (eds.), M.C. Escher's Legacy: A Centennial Celebration, Berlin & Heidelberg: Springer, pp. 24–51, doi:10.1007/3-540-28849-x_4
- ^ Messina, Barbara; Chiarenza, Stefano (December 2020), "Drawing and geometric constructions of polyhedra in the art of Escher", in Cheng, Liang-Yee (ed.), ICGG 2020 - Proceedings of the 19th International Conference on Geometry and Graphics, Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, vol. 1296, Springer International Publishing, pp. 895–903, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-63403-2_81
- ^ "M. C. Escher: Double Planetoid, December 1949", Collection, National Gallery of Canada, retrieved 2021-11-14
- ^ "M. C. Escher: Double Planetoid, 1949", Collection, National Gallery of Art, retrieved 2021-11-14
- v
- t
- e
- Dolphins (1923)
- Tower of Babel (1928)
- Strada di Scanno (1929)
- Castrovalva (1930)
- The Bridge (1930)
- Atrani, Coast of Amalfi (1931)
- Still Life with Mirror (1934)
- Still Life with Spherical Mirror (1934)
- Hand with Reflecting Sphere (1935)
- Regular Division of the Plane (1936)
- Still Life and Street (1937)
- Metamorphosis I (1937)
- Day and Night (1938)
- Sky and Water I (1938)
- Sky and Water II (1938)
- Metamorphosis II (1939-1940)
- Reptiles (1943)
- Magic Mirror (1946)
- Three Spheres II (1946)
- Another World (1947)
- Drawing Hands (1948)
- Stars (1948)
- Double Planetoid (1949)
- Curl-up (1951)
- House of Stairs (1951)
- Puddle (1952)
- Dragon (1952)
- Gravitation (1952)
- Relativity (1953)
- Convex and Concave (1955)
- Three Worlds (1955)
- Print Gallery (1956)
- Cube with Magic Ribbons (1957)
- Belvedere (1958)
- Circle Limit III (1959)
- Ascending and Descending (1960)
- Waterfall (1961)
- Metamorphosis III (1967-1968)
- Snakes (1969)
- Escher in popular culture
- George Arnold Escher (father)
- Berend George Escher (brother)
- Mathematics and art
- Video games inspired by Escher
- Adventures in Perception (1971 documentary)
- Gödel, Escher, Bach (1979 book)
- M. C. Escher: Visions of Symmetry (1990 book)
- Symmetry aspects of M. C. Escher's periodic drawings (1965 book)