A Number of Things” by Camille Henrot explores play, control, and domestication through sculpture at Hauser & Wirth NYC.
Researchers discovered that our ability to recognize trees in art is linked to a mathematical principle called the branch ...
Beauty follows objective patterns in nature, guided by evolution and mathematics. The Fibonacci sequence and Golden Ratio ...
Anamkara Art presents the exhibition Essence & Forms: A Celebration of Femininity, Faith and the Natural World, organised by ...
Pamela describes her art as women inspired, stating that she has always been surrounded by strong, incredible, smart, ...
A study reveals that in the microscopic realm of atoms and subatomic particles the equations describing their behavior remain ...
Spirographs, invented in 1962, are toys that create geometric patterns using gears. These designs are used in art and similar patterns can be found in nature.
The crime-solvers of "Clue," the bugs of Cirque du Soleil's "OVO" and the experimental musicians of the Frequency Festival ...
Deeply influenced by art photography, after years of travelling around the world imbibing art and design, Manoj Arora creates ...
The math that describes the branching pattern of trees in nature also holds for trees depicted in art—and may even underlie ...
Sometimes the connections we make between disparate things are less than obvious. For Debra Edgerton, the connection between algae and society seemed innate when she looked at the microorganisms ...
Rachel Ruysch: Nature into Art certainly has all the makings of a great show. Ruysch’s life story is compelling, poignant and surprising, including everything from a lottery windfall to a ...