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Print Gallery (M. C. Escher)

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Artist
  
M. C. Escher

Created
  
1956

Period
  
Surrealism

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) MC Escher Print Gallery

Similar
  
M C Escher artwork, Surrealist artwork

Print Gallery (Dutch: Prentententoonstelling) is a lithograph printed in 1956 by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher. It depicts a man in a gallery viewing a print of a seaport, and among the buildings in the seaport is the very gallery in which he is standing. The lithograph has attracted discussion in both mathematical and artistic contexts.

Contents

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) MC Escher quotPrint Galleryquot 1956 Lithograph Contains most of

Origins

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) httpsiytimgcomviwzfTzj2tiewhqdefaultjpg

Bruno Ernst cites M. C. Escher as stating that he began Print Gallery "from the idea that it must be possible to make an annular bulge, a cyclic expansion ... without beginning or end." Escher attempted to do this with straight lines, but intuitively switched to using curved lines which make the grid expand greatly as it rotates.

Seeming paradox

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) Print Gallery 1956 MC Escher WikiArtorg

In the book Gödel, Escher, Bach, Douglas Hofstadter explains it as a strange loop showing three kinds of "in-ness": the gallery is physically in the town ("inclusion"); the town is artistically in the picture ("depiction"); the picture is mentally in the person ("representation").

Possible Droste effect

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) MC Escher More MathematicsltbrgtThan Meets the Eye Impossible world

Escher's signature is on a circular void in the center of the work. In 2003, two Dutch mathematicians, Bart de Smit and Hendrik Lenstra, reported a way of filling in the void by treating the work as drawn on an elliptic curve over the field of complex numbers. They deem an idealized version of Print Gallery to contain a copy of itself (the Droste effect), rotated clockwise by about 157.63 degrees and shrunk by a factor of about 22.58. Their website further explores the mathematical structure of the picture.

Post-modernism

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) Print Gallery Artists39 Market Original MC Escher woodcuts and

Print Gallery has been discussed in relation to post-modernism by a number of writers, including Silvio Gaggi, Barbara Freedman, Stephen Bretzius, and Marie-Laure Ryan.

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) MC Escher39s Print Gallery unravelled 39completed39 and zoomed in

References

Print Gallery (M. C. Escher) Wikipedia