1/2 The Art of the Impossible: MC Escher and Me - Secret Knowledge

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  • Опубликовано: 31 окт 2015
  • • 1/2 The Art of the Imp...
    First broadcast: Sep 2015.
    Episode 18/18 World-leading cosmologist Professor Sir Roger Penrose is more than just a fan of MC Escher's mind-bending art. During the course of a long creative collaboration, the British mathematician and the Dutch artist exchanged ideas and inspirations. Some of Escher's most iconic images have their origin in Penrose's mathematical sketches - while the artist's work has served as a starting point for the professor's own explorations of new scientific ideas. To coincide with the first ever Escher retrospective in the UK, Penrose takes us on a personal journey through Escher's greatest masterpieces - marvelling at his intuitive brilliance and the penetrating light it still sheds on complex mathematical concepts.

Комментарии • 249

  • @hydorah
    @hydorah 11 месяцев назад +12

    What an incredible story. Imagine being a person who inspired by Escher went off and made something that inspired Escher

    • @PADARM
      @PADARM Месяц назад +1

      In a totally recursive way that Escher loved so much

  • @elijahclements8646
    @elijahclements8646 4 года назад +50

    The way he say's "what might be possible" rather than "what is possible" really reflects his humility as a scientist, amplifies the idea that we really don't know anything and his language choice shares his humble demeanour despite being one of the great minds in recent history. This openness and awareness that he too knows nothing is probably what led him to his interest in Escher and massively benefited his work in one of the most important Art-Science collaborations ever. Without this humility it's hard to learn from other people, especially an intelligent and established scientist from a relatively unknown artist (at that time)

  • @xtop23
    @xtop23 Год назад +7

    MC Escher is one of my 2 favorite artists of all time. The ability to MAKE you adjust your perception...... MAKE you enter his world..... is unprecedented. Utterly genius.

    • @jeffreyjefferson536
      @jeffreyjefferson536 Год назад

      And who's the other?
      I'm not into art (abstract, cubist or otherwise) much, but Dali immediately comes to mind. And Luis Borges - who in a sense wrote down what Escher drew.

    • @xtop23
      @xtop23 Год назад

      @@jeffreyjefferson536 You have excellent divination skills lol. Dali is top 5 for me certainly......... his watercolors he did for Dante are inexplicably ...... wonderfully ....wrought.
      Number 2 is Gustav Klimt ......"The Embrace"...... devastates me every time I look at it. If you ever have a chance to be in the same room...... properly lit....... with that utter mastery and vibrant majesty...... you will be moved.
      Number 3 although yes, it's an easy choice and smacks of a pedestrian understanding of art because of the ease with which you can attach to him.........., is Van Gogh.
      Specifically, "Sunflowers"....... although, "Wheat Field with Cypresses" also floors me.

    • @krishnamayimarianni8026
      @krishnamayimarianni8026 11 месяцев назад

      Who is the other

  • @rbaleksandar
    @rbaleksandar 6 лет назад +55

    Escher was truly a genius. Your brain gets turned upside down every time you look at his abstract works.

  • @SLB4523
    @SLB4523 11 месяцев назад +3

    What is truly bewildering is that his works weren’t drawings but woodcut prints.

    • @armandogavilan1815
      @armandogavilan1815 2 месяца назад

      Yeah both things, the ideas/visions and the craft fo sure.

  • @GandhiShelly
    @GandhiShelly 3 года назад +25

    Drawing hands on the back cover of mathematical analysis book is a good introduction to Escher, I just wish there was more of his work in school. To me the beauty is Escher is that he leads the mind to thoughts of integrated subject thinking, a place where most education is found lacking. Maths, arts biology, engineering have been created by humans. Escher's work helps us in understanding that they are all interconnected in ways that we sometimes can't express. Unless of course you are Escher then you can in each drawing.

    • @livinginthisgalaxy7961
      @livinginthisgalaxy7961 3 года назад

      Try making something yourself and introduce it in your school...

    • @khalil_art
      @khalil_art 2 года назад +3

      Art is like a combination of science, philosophy and beauty.

    • @steveescher1554
      @steveescher1554 Год назад

      Agreed. I actually seen his work in almost all of my text books, other than history. No one but me knew who he was though.

  • @user-wf8eo9xn6y
    @user-wf8eo9xn6y 3 года назад +35

    While I was reading "The Aleph and other Stories" by Jorge Luis Borges, it happened I looked at the front cover's painting "Other World” by M. C. Escher. I searched for the painting on the internet and here where I landed. Long live Reading, Curiosity & Knowledge.

    • @bazmalaza85
      @bazmalaza85 3 года назад +3

      there are no so called "coincidences" in the Youniverse

    • @creativestudio101
      @creativestudio101 Год назад

      Long live Reading, Curiosity & Knowledge indeed.

  • @panographic
    @panographic 3 года назад +11

    congratulations to Sir Roger Penrose for winning the 2020 Nobel prize in Physics

  • @adammurkin7496
    @adammurkin7496 5 лет назад +11

    Well this is a delight. I clicked on this thinking I was going to watch an interesting documetary on Escher, instead I get that, plus it is one of the my favourite human beings discussing him. Wonderful.

  • @_bluephoenix_
    @_bluephoenix_ Год назад +13

    What a priviledge and honour to have worked with such an amazing mind.
    Ive been so encaptured by Eschers work since I was a teen- looking at his work for hours. There is always so much tiny detail you dont notice at first.
    I cant imagine how a brain that comes up with these visual illusions, works - let alone be skilled enough to transfer that so skillfully!
    Thank you for such a wonderful video!

  • @wmgthilgen
    @wmgthilgen Год назад +1

    It was my viewing of the various art by Escher, that caused me to learn how to think out side the box.

  • @Capochin950
    @Capochin950 11 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent film . Very interesting.Very clever work making the “impossible “models.

  • @lmercan4809
    @lmercan4809 5 лет назад +9

    You can look at Escher's art and find something new each time!!! I saw these works awhile ago when they were on display in Washington, DC. My other favorite is Vermeer ...said to be an artist who also used maths in his work & again, always see something new each time it's viewed. Excellent video - thank you.😀

  • @bensnide5846
    @bensnide5846 Год назад +2

    I love it I love it I absolutely love it. Conversations and ideas like this, I could just listen to these guys talk and watch them doodle infinitely

  • @jayski9410
    @jayski9410 Год назад +2

    Escher's work always reminded me of a paradox I ran into when first learning computer programming. That being that finite decimals we're all used to in the base 10 number system become infinitely repeating "decimals" in base 2 or the binary system that computers use. Leading to unexpected round-off errors especially when dealing with money. And these days I think back to Escher when trying to grasp higher dimensional spaces required by string theory or depictions of hyperbolic spaces.

  • @EleanorPeterson
    @EleanorPeterson Год назад +2

    Delightful! I did find it necessary, though, to keep pausing, reversing, and rewatching the video in order to study each image more fully. It was only as it began to grow dark outside that I realised I'd been watching a 15 minute film for almost 90 minutes.
    I think everyone involved would appreciate how a 3-dimensional visual experience had been so effective in distorting my perception of the passage of time.😁

  • @KenSmith-bv4si
    @KenSmith-bv4si Год назад +2

    His art work blew my mind.

  • @Dumptheclutchevo
    @Dumptheclutchevo Год назад +1

    imagine being the inspiration for some of the greatest pieces of artwork in the world
    mind-boggling!

    • @TheUrantia001
      @TheUrantia001 Год назад

      he is only a conduit..the art is working through him...

  • @alancharbonneau4108
    @alancharbonneau4108 Год назад +2

    I never knew until this video that Penrose inspired “Ascending and Descending”, one of my favorites by Escher. 😁

  • @David-xl9cp
    @David-xl9cp Год назад +1

    Mind on a completely different level, I have had one of his art books for around 40 years, just amazing 🤩

  • @steviegaga
    @steviegaga Год назад +1

    Extremely interesting and well done. I’ve been into MCE since the 1960’s and he is timeless

  • @verioffkin
    @verioffkin 8 лет назад +7

    Simply beautiful.

  • @kaliensmashingatoms
    @kaliensmashingatoms Год назад +3

    I've always had a massive appreciation for MC Escher. But I was glad to find this Little gem of a video that is taken my appreciation to an entirely new level.

  • @Pakunin61
    @Pakunin61 Год назад +1

    No hay duda de que estamos ante la obra de un genio. Todas sus creaciones son maravillosas.

  • @veronicaclarke7499
    @veronicaclarke7499 5 лет назад +2

    My favourite artist!

  • @deborahguillory8431
    @deborahguillory8431 11 месяцев назад +1

    I recall his work on cover of Southwestern Bell telephone directory. Love his work

  • @natalya9821
    @natalya9821 Год назад +1

    Hello.
    This story is with exciting twists.
    Thank you.
    Subscribed.

  • @1N2themystic
    @1N2themystic Год назад +1

    I love watching a documentary that really catches my attention and inspires me to wonder if I have any creativity in my heart, and right about the time they start getting into the best part of the

  • @ARK842001
    @ARK842001 6 лет назад +8

    Been studying the fourth dimension for years. This is incredibly helpful.

    • @evilseedsgrownaturally1588
      @evilseedsgrownaturally1588 5 лет назад +2

      ARK842001 watching youtube videos does not equate to “study”.

    • @chompers11
      @chompers11 3 года назад +4

      @@evilseedsgrownaturally1588 lmao yes it does, clown

  • @librem2013
    @librem2013 6 лет назад +5

    If anyone has ever played Legend of Gauntlet: Dark Legacy all the way through, you'll find many contemporary artists influenced the creation of the dark world, but mostly Esher. If I remember correctly, each of the some 7 different portals lead to a realm influenced almost entirely by Esher.

  • @narang99
    @narang99 8 лет назад +22

    Thank you for creating your channel, it's a great useful resource and education. Your time and effort to put this out is greatly appreciated.

    • @taran333tula
      @taran333tula  8 лет назад +4

      +Gautam Narang ...Thank YOU for your appreciation !

  • @shannonolivas9524
    @shannonolivas9524 Год назад +2

    I like these physical models of Escher's work, me I look at the original works and I say for instance on "Ascending" "oh, that's clever, he just ran this line on the right long here and took advantage of spacing and perspective in 2D art" or "oh, here in Relativity he's taking advantage of our architectural usage of 90 degree angles" In Waterfall he's using the same trick as in "Ascending", but these guys make it work in 3D space, really quite clever.

  • @AdCreative-ik7dg
    @AdCreative-ik7dg 8 месяцев назад +1

    Escher one of my fav ❤

  • @jennief2108
    @jennief2108 5 лет назад +2

    Superb work as always, thank you ) Jennie

  • @josephlloyd9636
    @josephlloyd9636 Год назад

    I can't wait to see these in person!! 🌻🏆🇺🇸

  • @sharonjack7239
    @sharonjack7239 2 года назад +2

    Very interesting video!! Thank you. USA

  • @kevincampbell1395
    @kevincampbell1395 5 месяцев назад +1

    Penrose is such a genius

  • @MichelleAckerStudios
    @MichelleAckerStudios 6 лет назад +2

    keep the great videos coming! awesome

  • @tomwells4899
    @tomwells4899 Год назад

    Amazing pictures full of mystery. I wonder in awe at the possibilities the imagination conjures up of an ever unfurling dawn of revelation. There's always more round the corner, something else to entice you into a never ending dream.

  • @kareno8634
    @kareno8634 6 лет назад +6

    Since i was 12 ~ He IS my Favorite ~ MC Escher !

    • @willnawke2326
      @willnawke2326 3 года назад +2

      since i was 11 he was mine, beat that

    • @kareno8634
      @kareno8634 3 года назад +1

      @@willnawke2326 8 ) nice to know. I could have been 11, it was 6th grade. lol Cheers!

  • @francoantonelli7723
    @francoantonelli7723 Год назад

    Well set out and informative…👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

  • @aryehfinklestein9041
    @aryehfinklestein9041 6 лет назад +1

    Excellent! thankyou.

  • @patricetan
    @patricetan 7 лет назад +3

    Thank you so much for posting this

  • @michaelplathphotography8537
    @michaelplathphotography8537 Год назад

    One of my favourite artists

  • @268gam
    @268gam 6 лет назад +2

    Great documentary

  • @elmedia8692
    @elmedia8692 6 лет назад +1

    Wonderful.

  • @steveescher1554
    @steveescher1554 Год назад +7

    All of his descendants ended up with some sort of artistic ability and or geometric abilities. When growing up, I personally drew very similar looking building as he did, without ever seeing his work yet. My family and I seemed to have a natural understanding of perspective and drawing 3-D shapes as well. I def did not inherit his genius though haha Also, the non Escher side of the family could barely draw a stick figure.

    • @User0000000000000004
      @User0000000000000004 Год назад

      ok, "steve"

    • @steveescher1554
      @steveescher1554 Год назад +2

      @@User0000000000000004 Why the strange comment? This video had a lot to do with how he had abilities in certain fields, despite never studying in those fields. So I was pointing out that genetic abilities are real and his ancestors actually picked up on some of those.

  • @constructivecapers
    @constructivecapers 8 лет назад +2

    So awesome!

    • @mrshumancar
      @mrshumancar 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/sP86VIHHw28/видео.html

  • @chrisnewman7281
    @chrisnewman7281 Год назад +3

    The idea of force perspective is used a lot in lord of the rings movie where you have large characters and smaller characters and they have to coexist in the same room

  • @TheFlipped1
    @TheFlipped1 6 лет назад

    O.o
    I just found your channel, subscribed right away!

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten 6 лет назад +3

    Anyone know of a video showing how prints like these are made? I mean, not just drawings, but the process of the printing. Because, if it is that the artist needs to work in negatives so to speak or something like that, I would be very much fascinated with seeing the process from first marks on the canvas to the final print... :)

  • @MGromov1
    @MGromov1 8 лет назад +2

    Wonderful documentary. Thank you very much.

  • @muggedinmadrid
    @muggedinmadrid 6 лет назад +1

    riveting documentary

  • @aorta538
    @aorta538 3 года назад +2

    My favorite top 3 dutch artists...
    -M.C. Escher
    -V. van Gogh
    -P. Mondriaan

    • @CEverly
      @CEverly Год назад

      I was wondering who your favs were. Thanks

  • @jimvandemoter6961
    @jimvandemoter6961 10 месяцев назад

    I never thought of Escher's works in mathematical terms. I'm not a mathematician. The big question was, for me, what kind of mind could even conceive of such ideas? His works still, after decades, fascinate me.

  • @johnobrien8398
    @johnobrien8398 6 лет назад

    Never seen this before excellent

  • @ralphaverill2001
    @ralphaverill2001 Год назад

    It was nice to hear the piano of Chilly Gonzales' "White Keys" in the opening of the video.

  • @eugenio1542
    @eugenio1542 Год назад

    Extraordinaire ! ☝️❤️🌍

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack7137 Год назад

    Relativity 1of Favz!

  • @elevated8978
    @elevated8978 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @TheRealMACA
    @TheRealMACA Год назад

    Subbed! Awesome channel, thx!

  • @kanabuki7163
    @kanabuki7163 8 лет назад +2

    thank you for all the info, quite helpful with reseach and etc. youre quite a useful channel!

  • @JuliaCrows10
    @JuliaCrows10 Год назад

    I find his work so very inspiring. It is a stairwell to nowhere and beyond. Is they fish; is they birds??

  • @salkinfamilychiropractic3142
    @salkinfamilychiropractic3142 4 года назад +1

    Anybody play "Monument Valley"? love this artists' work and those Penrose stairs!

  • @mihai1853
    @mihai1853 6 лет назад +6

    4:55 when i hear geometrically impossible.. i was tinking about this shape before he drew it

  • @hoastbeef1202
    @hoastbeef1202 6 лет назад +1

    I also like his song" U Can't Touch This"

  • @gostaknochenhauer3978
    @gostaknochenhauer3978 Год назад +1

    I have always loved Escher's works. Unfortunately, I don't own any of his prints, but I do have a book of his fantastic pictures. This is a wonderful exposé, but the loud and quite unnecessary music overlay should be removed. For some reason, the story ended in the middle of a sentnce. Is there a continuation somwehere?

  • @Ultra-Luminary
    @Ultra-Luminary 10 месяцев назад

    M. C ESCHER definitely had a very acutely attuned Mind....

  • @flyinghorseknuckles
    @flyinghorseknuckles Год назад +1

    I had no idea that Escher had been inspired by Penrose's works! That is apparent from my very naïve attempt at a documentary on Escher that I had made in college ages ago when I was 25. If you are curious, you can view it here:
    ruclips.net/video/x9oV3nDvoio/видео.html

  • @sparabildsom
    @sparabildsom 8 лет назад +1

    AMAZING!!!!!!!

  • @sonnenregen2449
    @sonnenregen2449 Год назад

    Thank u

  • @pnutdraws
    @pnutdraws 5 лет назад +1

    05:23 they probably shot that with a lower f stop so the the depth of field is so low that the wood thing behind is more blurry than the one in the front which kinda breaks the illusion , still very cool

  • @payntpot7623
    @payntpot7623 Год назад

    12:30 It does not start off as a still life and suddenly become a street as stated.
    Clearly it is a group of items on a table by a window pane and looks out and down onto a street scene. It is easy to see what attracted him to the juxtaposition of foreground and background. I have often marveled at similar scenes in my own abodes throughout the years. Items I have on a window sill and look out onto a street scene. If the window frame is not is view, and the glass is clean, there is no beginning or end to the scene.
    They all have an amazing way of looking at the world.

  • @lee-lemon
    @lee-lemon 6 лет назад +4

    6:38
    "Again it's a one eye only job."
    "Well, one eye of mine works better then the other."
    :D

  • @merlen424
    @merlen424 6 лет назад +1

    Ghilly Gonzalles - White Keys 0:00

  • @redd_frogg9806
    @redd_frogg9806 4 года назад

    I got a test on this so i decided to rewatch the video on my phone :> it was pretty interesting

    • @secretsofix
      @secretsofix 4 года назад

      I got Homework on this and my teacher give us this link. Idk what Im watching TwT

  • @brian5154
    @brian5154 11 месяцев назад +1

    ...we pass his house in Arnhem very often....

  • @tash_kite
    @tash_kite 2 года назад

    Wow so cool

  • @63artemisia63
    @63artemisia63 4 года назад +1

    The plants you mention that are unlike any you’ve ever seen are actually marine animals - corals, as in coral reefs!

  • @M.C.Escher2018
    @M.C.Escher2018 6 лет назад +2

    Do Black Holes recyle space time and debis?
    Could it be possible that black holes indirectly explain an expanding universe?
    Was there ever a "Big bang"?

  • @photobobo
    @photobobo Год назад +1

    Why does this video end abruptly?

  • @louisjohnson7441
    @louisjohnson7441 6 лет назад +1

    Genius

  • @nixl3518
    @nixl3518 Год назад

    Why is this clip, clipped short of it’s true length?

  • @justaguy-69
    @justaguy-69 11 месяцев назад

    i love escher , have many (most) of his prints in reproductions and i'm 80% done building my retirement home in the philippines inspired by him and frank lloyd wright out of concrete. i've never built a house before but spent years doing it in my imagination while driving my 18 wheeler over the road as a truck driver. i kind of overdid it strength wise as far as rebar and concrete composition , but not being a structural engineer i wanted to 'cover my butt' in this regard 😃🤣i plan to laminate and frame all my escher works and hang them throughout my home to enjoy as i grow older.

  • @truefiasco2637
    @truefiasco2637 4 года назад

    anyone else like the http tessellation in the description? not sure if intentional or not but it's better then having a link to part 2.

  • @MagmaVFX
    @MagmaVFX 2 месяца назад

    What is the music here?

  • @MacauCheers
    @MacauCheers 5 лет назад

    He was just sketching from the stairs of the school for the 3D Illusion works. Great Dutch Architecture Building nurtures this talent! M C Escher Museum Clip: ruclips.net/video/91oBJcJ5ws8/видео.html

  • @teddy3761
    @teddy3761 6 лет назад

    Song 12:12?

  • @nicovanderwolk
    @nicovanderwolk Год назад +1

    Relativity actual can be built. I did it. It's about 20 x 20 x 20 cm.

  • @johnupper5225
    @johnupper5225 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for this doc. It would have been better if the cameraperson had not been stuck on shallow depth of field, which is pretty, but destroys the depth illusions.

  • @jolieusher
    @jolieusher 3 года назад +2

    THE LABYRINTH MOVIE

  • @imadbabbili
    @imadbabbili 7 месяцев назад

    9:15 ls he talking myself or about MC?

  • @vilkomen
    @vilkomen Год назад +1

    Wish the would stop up a bit so the whole impossible shape would be in focus. Gives away the illusion if some of it is out of focus.

  • @marcussparticus8380
    @marcussparticus8380 Год назад +1

    Informative but ends to soon, what happened to the rest of the documentary.

    • @RichardLaurence
      @RichardLaurence Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/1CYrGpd8k5w/видео.html

  • @jamieyoho2310
    @jamieyoho2310 5 лет назад +1

    How many stairs are they gonna make that poor dude walk up?

  • @weeverob
    @weeverob Год назад

    There’s a great game that utilizes Escher’s logic called Monument Valley

  • @1330m
    @1330m 2 года назад

    so good . informative
    Escher and Penrose are soulmates .
    1st century Israel = 21st century Korea . You have to know that .
    Amazing historical events are taking place there .
    Longitude 127 Seoul Okinawa Soul Axis -- Bahai Faith Rael
    Jesus Huh kyung young Magnificent aletheia .

  • @paulferguson1240
    @paulferguson1240 5 лет назад

    Three Guitars - Escher Style. Photographic Print: www.redbubble.com/people/jamthetreble/works/39729584-three-guitars-escher-style?p=photographic-print&ref=similar_products

  • @scatdog1
    @scatdog1 11 месяцев назад

    This would have been great if you would have given people more than three seconds to visualize his work.

  • @rooseveltdogboe5374
    @rooseveltdogboe5374 2 года назад +2

    HGS