Harman Patil (Editor)

Castrovalva (M. C. Escher)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Year
  
1930

Artist
  
M. C. Escher

Type
  
Lithograph

Created
  
February 1930

Castrovalva (M. C. Escher) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumba

Dimensions
  
53 cm × 42.1 cm (21 in × 16.6 in)

Similar
  
M C Escher artwork, Other artwork

Castrovalva bison scissorkick


Castrovalva is a lithograph print by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher, first printed in February 1930. Like many of Escher's early works, it depicts a place that he visited on a tour of Italy.

Contents

It depicts the Abruzzo village of Castrovalva, which lies at the top of a sheer slope. The perspective is toward the northwest, from the narrow trail on the left which, at the point from which this view is seen, makes a hairpin turn to the right, descending to the valley. In the foreground at the side of the trail, there are several flowering plants, grasses, ferns, a beetle and a snail. In the expansive valley below there are cultivated fields and two more towns, the nearest of which is Anversa degli Abruzzi, with Casale in the distance.

Castrovalva dream carpet


  • In 1982 the name "Castrovalva" was used in a story in the BBC television series Doctor Who. The storyline also relied heavily on recursion, a favorite theme in Escher's later and more famous works, and used ideas taken from Belvedere, Ascending and Descending, and Relativity to trap the protagonists in the city of Castrovalva.
  • The comic Kingdom of the Wicked is set in an imaginary world named Castrovalva.
  • References

    Castrovalva (M. C. Escher) Wikipedia