M.C. Escher in a Drop of Water

Posted by John Farrier in Art & Design, Photography on August 3, 2011 at 7:00 pm

M.C. Escher’s illustrations are even more surreal when they’re reflected in falling drops of water. redditor smsilton captured this amazing image using a 60mm macro lens. Check out the thread to find out how he did it. Link and Set Up Shot -via Geekologie

 
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Escher-Inspired Origami

Posted by Adrienne Crezo in Art, Art & Design, Crafts, Design on June 11, 2011 at 10:24 am

Everyone recognizes M.C. Escher’s famously impossible staircases, angles that inspire confusion and wonder. His most famous works have been referenced in pop culture since forever, and now the challenge to recreate these works in three dimensions has origami artists doing incredible things with paper. A rendition of Escher’s Relativity is shown above, but Kuriositas has a gallery of others. Link

Image credit: Crackpot Papercraft

 
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How to Build Escher’s Impossible Waterfall

Posted by Miss Cellania in Gadgets, Hacks & Mods on April 28, 2011 at 9:39 am

Remember the video of the impossible waterfall? Even after you saw how it was done, you were still impressed. Now Instructables has step-by-step instructions for you to make your own 3D version of the famous illusion! It’s not exactly simple, but it can be done. And if you can pull it off, you’ll flummox everyone who sees it. Link -via Boing Boing

 
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How Does the M.C. Escher Waterfall Machine Work?

Posted by John Farrier in Art & Design on February 18, 2011 at 4:40 pm

A few days ago, a viral video surfaced which appeared to show a functional model of M.C. Escher’s famous drawing “Waterfall“. How does it work? Boing Boing reader David Goldman proposes the above explanation. Do you agree?

via Boing Boing

 
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Working Model of M.C. Escher’s “Waterfall”

Posted by John Farrier in Video Clips on February 16, 2011 at 4:45 pm


(Video Link)

M.C. Escher’s Waterfall appears to show a stream of water fed by itself — something of a perpetual motion machine. This clever video of mysterious origin creates the illusion of a functional model of that image.

via GearFuse

 
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M.C. Escher in LEGO

Posted by Queuebot in Art, Neatorama Exclusives, Pictures, Toys on July 2, 2010 at 1:17 pm

I'm sure a lot of you like the art of M.C. Escher and playing with LEGO, but Andrew Lipson and Daniel Shiu really managed to combine the two into an amazing example of geek art*. Take a look at their fantastic creations:


Escher's Balcony in LEGO by Andrew Lipson and Daniel Shiu, inspired by M.C. Escher's Balcony (1945)

Balcony is Andrew and Daniel's first re-creation of M.C. Escher's artwork:

A significant part of the problem was figuring out exactly what distortion Escher had used to blow up the centre of the picture; firstly because we wanted to "undistort" the picture in order to be able to copy the townscape, and secondly so that we could transform our final photograph into something that looked like Escher's print. I tried several different ideas before I found one that produced plausible results. An unfortunate side-effect of the transformation is that the resolution suffers in the middle of the picture, where it's expanded by a factor of four. I'm using a 1.3 megapixel camera, and our initial results didn't look too great. Our eventual solution was to take a number of separate shots, zooming in on distinct parts of the model, and glue them together as a mosaic panorama. The image above was constructed in this way from 16 images. The final Escher transformation was implemented in a custom C program that I hacked together.


Escher's Belvedere in LEGO by Andrew Lipson and Daniel Shiu, inspired by M.C. Escher's Belvedere (1958)

Next up is Belvedere, which require the use of tricky half-brick spacing, diagonal beams and photography from just the right viewpoint. Andrew's webpage has the construction details and more awesome photos.

Ascending and Descending is Andrew and Daniel's third Escher art rendered in LEGO:

The secret is that the staircase spirals up and in: if you look at it from exactly the right position, the edge of the top step looks as though it's just lined up with the edge of the bottom step. The picture shows what's going on - I took it from a slightly different position and the edges no longer meet. Actually, because the lower edge is further from the camera than the top one, it looks smaller; we had to build it one stud wider to compensate.


Escher's Relativity in LEGO by Andrew Lipson and Daniel Shiu, inspired by M.C. Escher's Relativity (1953)

The pair's fourth creation is M.C. Escher's Relativity. There's no optical trick involved here, but the multiple directionality of the piece requires a nifty LEGO trick:

Unlike many of Escher's other "impossible" pictures (like "Ascending and Descending"), there is actually no optical illusion involved here. Gravity seems to be working in three different directions simultaneously, but the picture shows a perfectly self-consistent physical scene. So modelling it should certainly be feasible. But while Escher's picture has three different "up"s, LEGO isn't quite so flexible...

For LEGO afficionados, the most significant thing about our version is the widespread use of SNOT ("Studs not on top") techniques - in plain English, having the LEGO studs pointing in lots of different directions. There are various tricks for making this work in general, and we probably used all of them here.


Escher's Waterfall in LEGO by Andrew Lipson and Daniel Shiu, inspired by M.C. Escher's Waterfall (1961)

Andrew and Daniel cheated big time for their fifth creation, based on M.C. Escher's Waterfall. This time, they did use photographic manipulation - but the result is still very cool:

OK, let's come clean. We actually resorted to photographic manipulation for this one. The model as built has the right-hand tower in the background. The water channels running from bottom left to top right are genuine and connect the two towers as shown. But the channels running bottom right to top left are actually only connected to the left-hand (near) tower. We took two photographs of the model; one with and one without these channels, but from the identical viewpoint.

The final image was constructed by very carefully overlaying portions of the left image with the corresponding portions from the right. Yes, it's dirty. We couldn't see how else to do it. Sorry.

*Yes, you've probably seen these floating around the web for years. In fact, Andrew and Daniel built them way back in 2002 (we even featured it before on Neatorama back in 2006). But Andrew and Daniel's creations are so awesome I think it should be re-featured for all the Web newbies ;)

Link – From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by djinny.

 
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M.C. Escher Would Love This Photograph

Posted by Minnesotastan in Everything Else on February 9, 2010 at 12:22 pm

You may need to click/enlarge the image to see the subtlety of the optical illusion.  Then the question to ponder will be whether this is the result of image editing, or whether it was created by clever woodcrafting with veneer.

Photo from Erik Minnema‘s photostream, via.

 
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