Does anyone know if he had seen any Islamic tiling art ?
Or for that matter if Escher had seen any of his.
Group theory / symmetry runs deep through these. One [0] of the circular ones made me think of braid(group)s. Not sure what the * operator would be in that case.
Speaking of braid groups Richeson had a very interesting blog post on the braid like groups of maypole dances.
Let me find and submit separately (spoiling a Hokusai story with another story, no matter how interesting, would be a personal sacrilege). Found it [1][2].
About halfway through there is a pattern depicting birds behind a chain link fence that he did possibly the same year the chain link fence was invented in the United Kingdom.
srean · 1h ago
So Banksy of his time to do that.
PaulHoule · 3h ago
The Metropolitan Museum has books of fabric samples for kimonos with colorful and complex patterns but unfortunately I could only find pictures of kimonos:
Does anyone know how are these patterns were intended to be applied? It seems like they might be block printed, but the fact that they're called "dyeing patterns" makes me think of some kind of resist or shibori.
Beijinger · 3h ago
Is there a PDF Version for download?
pvg · 2h ago
If you google the title it seems to find some more downloady variants.
Does anyone know if he had seen any Islamic tiling art ? Or for that matter if Escher had seen any of his.
Group theory / symmetry runs deep through these. One [0] of the circular ones made me think of braid(group)s. Not sure what the * operator would be in that case.
Speaking of braid groups Richeson had a very interesting blog post on the braid like groups of maypole dances.
Let me find and submit separately (spoiling a Hokusai story with another story, no matter how interesting, would be a personal sacrilege). Found it [1][2].
[0] https://dl.ndl.go.jp/pid/1899550/1/10/
[1]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44225324
[2]https://divisbyzero.com/2009/05/04/the-maypole-braid-group/
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/354838
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search?q=kimono+jap...
People had kimonos with crazy prints throughout the Heian, warring states and Tokugawa periods.
I think this is my favorite, Foreign Business Establishment in Yokohama: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/73415
An original would be available: https://www.ebay.com/itm/126788233431