Optical illusions in Rome : a mathematical travel guide
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Optical illusions in Rome : a mathematical travel guide
(MAA spectrum, v. 99)
MAA Press, an imprint of the American Mathematical Society, c2019
- Other Title
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Romerske synsbedrag
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Note
"Originally published in Danish by the Danish Association of Mathematics Teachers: Romerske synsbedrag (København : Matematiklaererforeningen, 2016)"--CIP
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Optical Illusions in Rome is a beautifully written and richly illustrated guide that takes the reader on a tour through ingenious uses of geometry to create illusory impressions of space and grandeur in Italian Renaissance art and architecture in the Eternal City. The book takes us to some of the most striking and historically important uses of optical illusion and includes works of Peruzzi, Borromini, and Pozzo. The artworks are analyzed geometrically and placed in their historical context. The notes on visiting the art described make the volume the perfect companion for a study trip to Rome. A chapter on the principles of perspective geometry and a collection of exercises make the book a wonderful resource for a module on perspective in a geometry or art history course. The mathematical discussion is kept at a level accessible to a reader with a familiarity with high school geometry.
Kirsti Andersen is a distinguished historian of mathematics and emerita faculty at Aarhus University. Her previous book, The Geometry of an Art, is widely recognized as the definitive work on the history of the use of perspective in European art. Viktor Blasjo, the translator, is a historian of mathematics on the faculty at Utrecht University. Blasjo has won both the Ford and Polya prizes for expository writing from the Mathematical Association of America.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Trompe l'oeil on walls
Three-dimensional trompe l'oeil
The anamorphosis in Trinita dei Monti
Ceilings as image surfaces
Some results from perspective theory
Exercises
Notes for the traveller
Endnotes
Bibliography
Sources of the illustrations.
by "Nielsen BookData"