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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.
The World of Edena (Le Monde d'Edena in French, also published in English as The Aedena Cycle) is a series of graphic novels by French artist Jean "Mœbius" Giraud.It grew organically out of a promotional album Mœbius made for the French car manufacturer Citroën, called "The Star", in 1983.
John Ernest (May 6, 1922 – July 21, 1994) was an American-born constructivist abstract artist. He was born in Philadelphia , in 1922. After living and working in Sweden and Paris from 1946 to 1951, he moved to London, England , where he lived and worked from 1951.
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 Mobius Artists Group is an interdisciplinary group of artists, founded in 1977 by Marilyn Arsem in Boston, Massachusetts as Mobius Theater. It is known for incorporating a wide range of visual, performing and media arts into live performance, video, installation and intermedia works.
Scientists Solve 50-Year-Old Möbius Mystery maxkabakov - Getty Images In 1977, two mathematicians created a conjecture that proposed the minimum size a paper strip needed to be in order to form ...
Born in Brussels to a family of architects, Schuiten had many relatives, especially his father and brothers, who were instrumental in what he has termed Bruxellisation, the demolition of historic architecture (typified by Belgian Art Nouveau architect Victor Horta, who worked in Brussels at the turn of the 20th century) in favor of anonymous, low-quality modernist office and business buildings.