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@mars-cmc-blog
A video on YouTube illustrates the making process in 3D model render of Waterfall of MC Escher. This video gave me some idea on my project.
Initially, I wanted to create a new 3d modeling of ‘ dislocation of time and space ’ like the concept of ‘ Belvedere ’. It seems impossible to build a three-dimensional modeling like that. However, it can be imitated in one angle. And the truth is that if the modeling be rotated.
These two pictures are the most famous artworks of M.C.Escher. ‘Belvedere’ and ‘Waterfall’.
Maurits Cornelis Escher (1898-1972) is one of the world's most famous graphic artists. His art is enjoyed by millions of people all over the world, as can be seen on the many web sites on the internet. He is most famous for his so-called impossible constructions, such as Ascending and Descending, Relativity, his Transformation Prints, such as Metamorphosis I, Metamorphosis II and Metamorphosis III, Sky & Water I or Reptiles. But he also made some wonderful, more realistic work during the time he lived and traveled in Italy. Castrovalva for example, where one already can see Escher's fascination for high and low, close by and far away. The lithograph Atrani, a small town on the Amalfi Coast was made in 1931, but comes back for example, in his masterpiece Metamorphosis I and II. M.C. Escher, during his lifetime, made 448 lithographs, woodcuts and wood engravings and over 2000 drawings and sketches. Like some of his famous predecessors, - Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Dürer and Holbein-, M.C. Escher was left-handed.
The Penrose stairs or Penrose steps, also dubbed the impossible staircase, is an impossible object created by Lionel Penrose and his son Roger Penrose. A variation on the Penrose triangle, it is a two-dimensional depiction of a staircase in which the stairs make four 90-degree turns as they ascend or descend yet form a continuous loop, so that a person could climb them forever and never get any higher. This is clearly impossible in three dimensions. The “continuous staircase” was first presented in an article that the Penroses wrote in 1959, based on the so-called “triangle of Penrose” published by Roger Penrose in the British Journal of Psychology in 1958. M.C. Escher then discovered the Penrose stairs in the following year and made his now famous lithograph Klimmen en dalen (Ascending and Descending) in March 1960. Penrose and Escher were informed of each other’s work that same year. Escher developed the theme further in his print Waterval (Waterfall), which appeared in 1961.
✖️✖️FOSTERGINGER AT PINTEREST ✖️
An easy impossible structure
Artist: Vitaly Glovatsky
Vitaly Glovatsky
Artist: Vitaly Glovatsky Impossible architecture Influence: M.C. Escher
Vitaly Glovatsky
Vitaly Glovatsky
A colorful scene of impossible structures by Vitaly Glovatsky
Explore a 3D world where where spatial relationships are all askew through this animation of MC Escher's Relativity. The physics of this world has three sour...
A 3D animation of M.C. Escher who is one of the most famous Artist in the area of impossible structures.