The former 17th-century palace on the Lange Voorhout
in The Hague houses the Escher Museum. Designers and mathematicians alike are
known to admire Maurits Cornelis Escher,
a Dutch graphical artist, for his prints and woodcuts; and I am no exception.
So when I had to be in The Hague, I seized the opportunity to visit the museum.
M.C. Escher (Mauk to friends) was born in Leeuwarden and grew up in Arnhem. At
school he excelled at drawing, but showed little academic aptitude. After he
had taken up carpentry he started a studie in architecture, but quickly
switched to decorative arts. He was taught by the Samuel de Mesquita. After his
first travels in northern Italy and Spain he became greatly influenced by the
natural landscape with its sharp contrasts and the geometric Islamic designs he
found for instance in the tiles of the Alhambra. He eventually settled in Italy
with his family to end up back in the Netherlands after short stays in Switzerland
and Belgium. Most of Escher's best known works are from his Dutch period. He
died in 1972 aged 73.
In his early works Escher drew from nature, with a
special interest in insects, landscapes and leaves. In 1922 he produces 8
portraits (one shown on the left) with the faces divided in several textural planes.
In the 1930s he produces many landscapes, streetscapes (in the middle) and
still lives, often from extreme vantage points to dramatise the perspective or
including visual tricks. The mathematical influence in his work is evident from
1936 onwards, when he starts producing his morphs (an example with moths is shown
on the right).
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