Bathsheba: Difference between revisions

Find traditional instrumental music
(Created page with '[[File:clef.jpg|350px|right|thumb|<font face="times, serif" size="3">Bathsheba Grossman, the artist creator of this mathematical sculpture, says:</font> <i><font face="times, ser…')
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:clef.jpg|350px|right|thumb|<font face="times, serif" size="3">Bathsheba Grossman, the artist creator of this mathematical sculpture, says:</font> <i><font face="times, serif" size="3">"This sculpture is a sign of order and harmony for every note and instrument, voice and music.  It is a single ribbon that follows itself through space, and due to its unobstructed length it rings like a bell, low and long."</font></i><font face="times, serif" size="3"> For me it is a sign of freedom. She kindly gaves me the permission to use it as logo for my Ur-Text.</font>]]
[[File:clef.jpg|350px|right|thumb|<font face="times, serif" size="3">Bathsheba Grossman, the artist creator of this mathematical sculpture, says:</font> <i><font face="times, serif" size="3">"This sculpture is a sign of order and harmony for every note and instrument, voice and music.  It is a single ribbon that follows itself through space, and due to its unobstructed length it rings like a bell, low and long."</font></i><font face="times, serif" size="3"> For me it is a sign of freedom. She kindly gaves me the permission to use it as logo for my Ur-Text.</font>]]
<p><font face="times, serif" size="3">
Bathseba Grossman is an artist exploring the region between art and mathematics, and [[http://www.bathsheba.com/|this]] is her gallery and storefront.  Her work is about life in three dimensions: working with symmetry and balance, getting from a zero point to infinity, and always finding beauty in geometry.
</font></p>

Revision as of 12:49, 29 January 2010

Bathsheba Grossman, the artist creator of this mathematical sculpture, says: "This sculpture is a sign of order and harmony for every note and instrument, voice and music. It is a single ribbon that follows itself through space, and due to its unobstructed length it rings like a bell, low and long." For me it is a sign of freedom. She kindly gaves me the permission to use it as logo for my Ur-Text.

Bathseba Grossman is an artist exploring the region between art and mathematics, and [[1]] is her gallery and storefront. Her work is about life in three dimensions: working with symmetry and balance, getting from a zero point to infinity, and always finding beauty in geometry.