수정본

HELP TO CORRECT NOW!수정되지 않은

Yuradem (으)로 부터 도착한메세지 - English

    • Mathematics and the Arts.

    • Since the ancient times pursued to depict a man’s body with perfect proportions, while sculptors – to carve it from stone.
    • Not only they tried to test it in practice, but also they left many manuscripts of this subject.
  • For example, the sculptor Polykleitos wrote a treatise of mathematical proportions for carving an ideal man.
    • The ancient Egyptians and Greeks knew about the golden ratio – an aesthetically pleasing ratio and implied it in their paintings, buildings.
  • The idea of the Egyptian triangle was realized in the design of such famous buildings as the Pyramid of Cheops, the Parthenon and the Colosseum.
  • A famous Renaissance painter Leonardo da Vinci also used mathematics in his works.
  • Being Luca Pacioli’s student, he studied his book Summa, from which he copied tables of proportions.
  • In Mona Lisa he used the idea of Golden Rectangles.
  • In The Last Supper he intensively sought how to arrange characters at the table.
  • So the whole painting was constructed in a ratio of 12:6:4:3.
  • With the further development of Mathematics works of artists became more complicated, what we can detect in the paintings of the best-known representative of an imp-art M. C. Escher.
  • He explored the concepts of infinity and symmetry and masterly used it.
  • He used to tile surfaces with regular shapes such as triangles, squares and hexagons, irregular polygons.
  • In the middle of 1980-s the fractal art was developed.
  • A fractal is a self-congruent set.
  • The considered icons of it are the Julia set and Mandelbrot set.
  • Geometry was always the most beautiful branch of Mathematics and it made a great impact on the Arts, and it still makes.
  • Thus, they were bounded together tightly for many decades.

각 문장을 수정해주세요! - English