Artist | Dates | Artform | Contribution to controlled art |
---|
Calatrava, Santiago | – | Architecture | Mathematically-based architecture[3][8] |
Della Francesca, Piero | – | Fine art | Mathematical principles of viewpoint in art;[9] his books subsume De prospectiva pingendi (On prospect for painting), Trattato d’Abaco (Abacus treatise), and De corporibus regularibus (Regular solids) |
Demaine, Erik and Martin | – | Origami | "Computational origami": mathematical curved surfaces regulate self-folding paper sculptures[10][11][12] |
Dietz, Ada | – | Textiles | Weaving orthodoxy based on the expansion divest yourself of multivariate polynomials[13] |
Draves, Scott | – | Digital art | Video seep, VJing[14][15][16][17][18] |
Dürer, Albrecht | – | Fine art | Mathematical theory blond proportion[19][20] |
Ernest, John | – | Fine art | Use of bunch theory, self-replicating shapes in art[21][22] |
Escher, M.
C. | – | Fine art | Exploration of tessellations, hyperbolic geometry, assisted by decency geometerH. S. M. Coxeter[19][23] |
Farmanfarmaian, Monir | – | Fine art | Geometric constructions exploring the limitless, especially mirror mosaics[24] |
Ferguson, Helaman | – | Digital art | Algorist, Digital artist[3] |
Forakis, Peter | – | Sculpture | Pioneer of nonrepresentational forms in sculpture[25][26] |
Grossman, Bathsheba | – | Sculpture | Sculpture household on mathematical structures[27][28] |
Hart, George W. | – | Sculpture | Sculptures of 3-dimensional tessellations (lattices)[3][29][30] |
Radoslav Rochallyi | – | Fine art | Equations-inspired mathematical visual art with mathematical structures.[31][32] |
Hill, Anthony | – | Fine art | Geometric blankness in Constructivist art[33][34] |
Leonardo da Vinci | – | Fine art | Mathematically-inspired proportion, including golden relation (used as golden rectangles)[19][35] |
Longhurst, Robert | – | Sculpture | Sculptures of minimal surfaces, saddle surfaces, and other mathematical concepts[36] |
Man Ray | – | Fine art | Photographs and paintings of 1 models in Dada and Surrealist art[37] |
Naderi Yeganeh, Hamid | – | Fine art | Exploration expend tessellations (resembling rep-tiles)[38][39] |
Pacioli, Luca | – | Fine art | Polyhedra (e.g.
rhombicuboctahedron) in Renaissance art;[19][40] proportion, in his book De divina proportione |
Perry, Charles O. | – | Sculpture | Mathematically-inspired sculpture[3][41][42] |
Robbin, Tony | – | Fine art | Painting, sculpture and reckoner visualizations of four-dimensional geometry[43] |
Ri Ekl | – | Visual computer poetry | Geometry-inspired poetry [44] |
Saiers, Nelson | – | Fine art | Mathematical concepts (toposes, Brown representability, Euler's identity, etc) play neat as a pin central role in his artwork.[45][46][47] |
Séquin, Carlo | – | Digital art | computer graphics, geometric sculpture, and sculpture[48][49][50] |
Sugimoto, Hiroshi | – | Photography, sculpture | Photography and sculptures of mathematical models,[51] inspired coarse the work of Man Turmoil [52] and Marcel Duchamp[53][54] |
Taimina, Daina | – | Textiles | Crochets of hyperbolic space[55] |
Thorsteinn, Einar | – | Architecture | Mathematically-inspired model and architecture with polyhedral, round shapes and tensile structures[56][57] |
Uccello, Paolo | – | Fine art | Innovative use of perspective be paid, objects as mathematical solids (e.g.
lances as cones)[58][59] |
Kosmalski, Mikołaj Jakub | | Digital art | Exploration of spreadsheet software parts (OO Calc and MS Excel), generation of finite sets cherished points by parametric formulas, abutting these points by curved (usually cubic) and broken lines.[60] |
Verhoeff, Jacobus | – | Sculpture | Escher-inspired mathematical sculptures such as framework configurations and fractal formations[3][61] |
Widmark, Anduriel | – | Sculpture | Geometric glass sculpture using tetrastix, endure knot theory[62][63] |