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Friedrich Otto Karl Möbius (24 May 1928 – 7 August 2024) [1] was a German art and architectural historian. From 1976 to 1991, he was the full professor of art history at the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena.
Jean Henri Gaston Giraud (French:; 8 May 1938 – 10 March 2012) was a French artist, cartoonist, and writer who worked in the Franco-Belgian bandes dessinées (BD) tradition.
Born in communist East Germany, Moebius was forced to serve in the East German army. [1] Having initially pursued a formal education and a career in engineering and construction, he later studied painting at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. [2] Moebius moved to the US in 1998, after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
This is a list of artists who actively explored mathematics in their artworks. [3] Art forms practised by these artists include painting, sculpture, architecture, textiles and origami. Some artists such as Piero della Francesca and Luca Pacioli went so far as to write books on mathematics in art.
List of works by Henri Matisse; List of works by Antonin Mercié; List of works by Jean Metzinger; List of works by Michelangelo; List of artworks by John Middleton; List of artwork at the Minnesota State Capitol; List of paintings by Claude Monet; List of works by Alphonse Mucha; Works of Elizabeth Murray; List of works in the Museum of Modern Art
On a smaller scale, Moebius Chair (2006) by Pedro Reyes is a courting bench whose base and sides have the form of a Möbius strip. [109] As a form of mathematics and fiber arts, scarves have been knit into Möbius strips since the work of Elizabeth Zimmermann in the early 1980s. [110]
The following is a list of works of sculpture, architecture, and painting by the Italian Baroque artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The numbering follows Rudolph Wittkower's Catalogue, published in 1966 in Gian Lorenzo Bernini: The Sculptor of the Roman Baroque. [1] [2] [3]
This is a partial list of works in MoMA's Department of Architecture and Design, organized by type. MoMA's Department of Architecture and Design was founded in 1932 [ 28 ] as the first museum department in the world dedicated to the intersection of architecture and design. [ 29 ]