Skip to main content.
Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Department of Mathematics and Statistics

ASU Math Awareness Month 2003


Anamorphosis
http://www.anamorphosis.com
More on the Art and Mathematics of Anamorphosis.

Hyperbolic Tesselations
http://www.hadron.org/~hatch/HyperbolicTesselations/
A description of the mathematics behind interlacing Escher-like figures like the one above right.

Origami
http://hverrill.net/origami/
Investigate the Mathematics of Origami.

BRIDGES
http://www.sckans.edu/~bridges/
BRIDGES is an annual conference devoted to mathematical connections in art, music, and science.

International Society of the Arts, Mathematics, and Architecture
http://www.isama.org
The ISAMA is an organization whose purpose is to further interdisciplinary education relating the arts, mathematics, and architecture.


Read about hyperbolic art and the design above in an essay by its creator, Douglas Dunham.

"Much of my sculptural body of work celebrates the remarkable achievements of mathematics as an abstract art form."
-- Helaman Ferguson

ASU graduate student Kelly Houle creates anamorphic art using methods that date to the Renaissance.


Last Update: Fri Feb 28 11:07:40 MST 2003
Page Contact: kaliszewski@asu.edu
Copyright © ABOR