Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, Volume 17, Issue 3-4, September - December 2023 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.
https://t.co/VtIBOlWKkX
My YouTube channel reached 100 subscribers💯You can head over there to find talks from the last mini-symposia on #math and #art that we organized during the annual meetings of @dmv_mathematik. There's quite some inspirational #MathArt content to be found: https://t.co/Ixt0yPiOEL
Reminder to mathematical sciences’ artists and illustrators that The Journal of Mathematics and the Arts publishes artist statements. Check the JMA Artist Statement Guidelines. https://t.co/wrTCmqG5Tf
In the 1970s, Marjorie Rice, a San Diego housewife and mother of five, was at her kitchen table when she uncovered numerous new geometric patterns, which experts had believed to be impossible. With no education beyond high school, Rice had, by 1976, discovered 58 unique types of pentagonal tiles, the majority of which were previously unknown. Her highest educational qualification was a high school diploma earned in 1939, which included just a single course in general mathematics.
"Mathematics and art have a really interesting partnership, where [math] can allow us to see and understand things, and art is a way that those things can then be communicated to others. And in between those two, we can hopefully [learn] how to build a better world."
- @Gelada