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

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  • Опубліковано 5 тра 2024
  • 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.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 121

  • @MossyMozart
    @MossyMozart Рік тому +16

    So many people rightly talk about Escher's design and intuitive math skills, but I love that this documentary also mentions his skill at engraving and woodcutting. A great image in your head means nothing if you don't also have the skill to create the image beautifully so that others can also see your vision. Inspired technical achievements!

    • @TheHippie27
      @TheHippie27 Рік тому

      I started doing linocuts this year, mainly inspired by Escher's work. It really is wild how much it adds a level of complexity and difficulty to what you're doing.
      I've been trying to simplify my drawings to compensate, but to see somebody who's blockprints look better than my drawings is awe-inspiring.

  • @Rafaga777
    @Rafaga777 7 років тому +57

    In terms of mathematics I'm truly a simpleton but I love the mind boggling art of Escher and the clear way professor Penrose explains the hidden mathematics of his works.

  • @anttam117
    @anttam117 3 роки тому +10

    What a beautiful meeting of two brilliant minds. I don’t understand why the Art establishment hasn’t paid attention to Escher’s work, but in the end, I think it has been for the best. Escher was in far better, and more interesting, company surrounded by Mathematicians.

  • @shaunmostert1585
    @shaunmostert1585 6 років тому +12

    M.C. Escher, A pitty we didnt learn more about him in Art as we did about all the other "well known" artists, Escher stood out to me and I think he was one of the best... His reflecting sphere is the best for me

  • @janinegaylard9233
    @janinegaylard9233 5 років тому +46

    This combination of art and math is the reason I became a textile designer!

    • @mariadam9157
      @mariadam9157 5 років тому +1

      - nice - and congratz - If I could - I would make these patterns on ceramics - yeah? :D - one would need a lot of patience and disciplined in the making though... but one can dream about it

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      @cashwill7119 2 роки тому

      @Alexander Daniel instablaster ;)

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  • @sloaiza81
    @sloaiza81 Рік тому +1

    Escher played down his understanding like all true masters. He has never fully been accepted by the Arts community because he is levels above it. The Escher-Penrose relationship is a classic example of ´real recognize real´.

  • @monicacall7532
    @monicacall7532 4 роки тому +4

    If more advanced math had been presented using Escher’s art work to explain various principles I might’ve actually understood and enjoyed it more than I did.

  • @allonifrah3465
    @allonifrah3465 8 місяців тому

    I grew up being introduced to my late grandfather, bless his memory. M.C. Escher is a national hero here. I've visited the Escher Museum in the Hague too. M.C. Escher's art has hugely inspired my own art style, helping me develop a love for geometry, polyhedra, intricate repeating patterns that are symmetrical over several axes at once, living things coming out of inanimate objects...etc.
    I think if M.C. Escher ever tried LSD or DMT he would've come out of those experiences in agreement that his mathmatical pattern art closely resembles the visions seen after ingesting these psychedelics, but he most likely wanted to distance himsel from the rather superficial "Woahh man. Far out, man. Super trippy, maaan' hippie culture of the time that was far below the level of consciousness from which he produced his artworks.

  • @hugosadyayalaayala3470
    @hugosadyayalaayala3470 Рік тому +3

    Roger Penrose cómo admiro a este señor!

  • @nickzabol
    @nickzabol 6 років тому +6

    A beautiful insight into M.C. Escher's life. During my high school art class I was introduced to his work, and became inspired to draw bank notes and birds together for an art assignment.

  • @davidmendelsohn1856
    @davidmendelsohn1856 6 років тому +13

    Great explanation of Escher`s work

  • @TrippyKitty08
    @TrippyKitty08 6 років тому +16

    My grandfather and father (both geniuses themselves) loved Escher! I grew up surrounded by wonderful prints. My favorite is the slightly lesser known "Puddle" I don't find it surprising that Escher found understanding of complex mathematics through art. As an artist myself sometimes drawing something out is the easiest way to understand it...and to show people what you're talking about!

    • @AnyoneCanSee
      @AnyoneCanSee 2 роки тому +2

      I clicked on your channel after reading this to check out your artwork and it was a really fun insight into making comic book art. Graphic novel artwork? I don't know much about the genre but I still enjoyed your videos. I hope you have continuing success in the chosen field.

  • @JFK1180
    @JFK1180 5 років тому +4

    Simply wonderful, the great masters of our time, Escher, Professor Sir Roger Penrose and his friend Professor Stephen Hawking.

  • @levelrod
    @levelrod 6 років тому +4

    Two geniuses that have bewildered my imagination since childhood. Surface scratchers who’s brilliance will inspire generations yet to come until those descendants of us make a more practical sense of what their work can wield. I can’t help but think that the Tokamak designers are the first to begin understanding the significance of the peek inside the veil that Penrose and Escher were being given.

  • @srcarranza
    @srcarranza Рік тому +2

    Best content I’ve seen in years!

  • @josephlloyd9636
    @josephlloyd9636 Рік тому +2

    Wonderful, so great iv viewed it twice & likely to again.. thank you.🏆💕🌼🍃

  • @tracytaylor7135
    @tracytaylor7135 6 років тому +7

    Great homage from one master to another.

  • @Meine.Postma
    @Meine.Postma 3 місяці тому

    I love the mind of Roger Penrose, it never stops

  • @bevsartsandcrafts715
    @bevsartsandcrafts715 8 років тому +19

    A fascinating two part documentary :)

  • @elmedia8692
    @elmedia8692 6 років тому +3

    Quality program making. I thought it was a lost art. Super entertainment, education.

  • @judithwalker3600
    @judithwalker3600 6 років тому +4

    Absolutely Astounding!

  • @azariahbenisrael3396
    @azariahbenisrael3396 2 роки тому +4

    He was such a talented artist, I really enjoy all his artwork when I was in Middle School I did a drawing of a hand drawing another hand and this was way before I heard of MC Escher. My art teacher really liked my drawing so much that she asked me if I can keep that drawing. I was so happy and I said yes and I handed it to her. And I did another drawing using colored markers I did a drawing completely using lines and again my teacher was impressed to the point it was out in display in a glass case on a wall in the middle of the school. I didn't know about MC Escher until years later and that's when I came across a drawing of his of a hand drawing another hand and I was like what? The drawing was a bit different but I was like I did a drawing similar like that in Middle School it blew my mind.

  • @spm2200
    @spm2200 4 роки тому +2

    I m so intrigued by the works of m c escher.

  • @veronicaclarke7499
    @veronicaclarke7499 4 роки тому +1

    Such a brilliant artist, great doco.

  • @funkykoval2099
    @funkykoval2099 Рік тому +1

    Great doc!
    Thanks for sharing.
    It's super nice to see the originals as albums I saw were badly printed with only small selection of works.

  • @flyinghorseknuckles
    @flyinghorseknuckles Рік тому +4

    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:
    ua-cam.com/video/x9oV3nDvoio/v-deo.html

  • @ashishlahiri9283
    @ashishlahiri9283 Рік тому

    Simply brilliant and unthinkable

  • @studiolezard
    @studiolezard Рік тому +1

    Brilliant documentary. Many thanks.

  • @santoshr2984
    @santoshr2984 6 років тому

    Absolutely wonderful

  • @HectorRodriguez-mp6ee
    @HectorRodriguez-mp6ee Рік тому +1

    Mathematics, Religion, Art, Music is all connected.

  • @ryos81
    @ryos81 2 роки тому +1

    Amazing. I love your work. And this MCE documentary is the best. MCE work is amazing.

  • @davepowell7168
    @davepowell7168 Рік тому

    Insightful observations perhaps. Escher was a draughtsman,artist and printer of the highest order..🎉

  • @kathygraham6251
    @kathygraham6251 Рік тому

    love his work, and impressed by the comments here. thanks so much

  • @noelwilson5960
    @noelwilson5960 5 років тому +1

    fantastic programme, well done BBC Scotland and Clem Hitchcock

  • @alma1820
    @alma1820 6 років тому +1

    It's just so perfect that it actually gives me satisfaction :)

  • @LaTigerGenesis
    @LaTigerGenesis 2 роки тому +1

    Nice, Peaches in Regalia!

  • @ministrysalm79
    @ministrysalm79 6 років тому +4

    Simplemente genial

  • @anamariadiasabdalah7239
    @anamariadiasabdalah7239 7 місяців тому

    A humanidade fica enriquecida com o acontecimento desses seres vivos aqui na Terra 🌎 💫

  • @jennief2108
    @jennief2108 5 років тому

    Again,many thanks )

  • @AntonioPerez-pf3xn
    @AntonioPerez-pf3xn 7 років тому +3

    La magia de Escher explicada por Penrose hijo. Genial

  • @henrikrolfsen584
    @henrikrolfsen584 Рік тому +1

    It is my firm belief, that time is curved, just as Einstein stated, and is an eternal circle . If such a great man, with such incredible perception, creative energy, can die and perish. Why should I give one second thought to my own demise?

  • @PaulCarterArt
    @PaulCarterArt 5 років тому +2

    Great insight to an amazing artist and the people he inspired. Thank you for sharing the time capsule for all generations

  • @choujoel8537
    @choujoel8537 Рік тому

    Remarkable !

  • @alienalajna
    @alienalajna 3 місяці тому

    Keeping in the theme of the title of this marvelous documentary - the art of the impossible - I would like to suggest to all viewers the short stories of Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, in particular "The Unbitten Elbow", about a man obsessed with biting his elbow, an anatomically impossible goal. (The Russians have an expression, "your elbow is near, but you can't bite it".). When challenged about this impossibility by a reporter, he answers in Spanish (in the Russian original as well as in the English translation), "Lo posible es para los tontos". That is, "the possible is for fools". (I have the story in the volume, "Autobiography of a Corpse", New York Review Books, translated brilliantly by Joanne Turnbull and Nikolai Formozov. Adam Thirlwell's introduction states that "language makes things possible that are not possible in reality" - which is obviously analogous to Escher's approach to visual art. Krzhizhanovsky was a very metaphysical writer, rarely published and never acclaimed in his time due to his indifference to the demands of "socialist realism" in the USSR. Instead, he did the impossible, and so was a genuine artist.

  • @KamauKoigi
    @KamauKoigi 8 років тому +4

    astounding!

  • @pearlhartney9
    @pearlhartney9 Рік тому +2

    How amazing and poignant that the last water colour was the re-imagined puzzle he sent and that it's name was ghost!

  • @brianmcmanus4286
    @brianmcmanus4286 3 роки тому +1

    Genius.

  • @richardlynch5632
    @richardlynch5632 Рік тому +1

    BRAVO
    😎👍❤🖖

  • @stndsure7275
    @stndsure7275 6 років тому

    If mind plays a central role in reality formation (as the provider of identity within a materially random reality) then it is not so surprising that Escher had a direct grasp of this. In a reality absent of internal identity, theoretically, we all do - consciousness provides identity, boundary conditions, relationship pattern, to a reality that is fundamentally absent of these conditions from the material side.

  • @kennethbaird968
    @kennethbaird968 Рік тому

    What a grate story

  • @justaguy-69
    @justaguy-69 8 місяців тому

    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.

  • @kareno8634
    @kareno8634 6 років тому +1

    THANK YOU SO MUCH! MC Escher ~ I have passed on word of him Most of my life * peace

  • @eugenio1542
    @eugenio1542 Рік тому +1

    Best drugs ! My mind is thoroughly blown and heart opened. Peace and Love ☝️❤️🌍

  • @lawrencefoster5569
    @lawrencefoster5569 6 років тому

    After listening to mic I'm convinced he was called by the Lord , for this.

  • @paulmitchell1099
    @paulmitchell1099 Рік тому +2

    I wonder if any of Escher's woodcuts or lino cuts still exist and make it possible to print a new copy of his work.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Рік тому

      @paul Mitchell - If they exist, they may be too valuable or fragile to endure the wear and tear. Look for his estate curator and inquire there.

  • @patrickfitzgerald2861
    @patrickfitzgerald2861 3 роки тому +1

    I'm curious to know more about how he (and his family) fared under the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.

  • @moonoovie
    @moonoovie Рік тому +1

    Why does the piano music have to be such a mystery?? Whose compositions are these?

  • @mariadam9157
    @mariadam9157 5 років тому +1

    ... If I could - I would make these patterns on ceramics - yeah? :D - like a tribute serie thing... BUT one would need a lot of patience and disciplined in the making though...ehhh... hehe... but I can dream about it

  • @Rockulaproductions
    @Rockulaproductions 8 років тому +19

    8:00 Frank Zappa "Peaches En Regalia"

    • @stevelindstedt8858
      @stevelindstedt8858 6 років тому

      not the original.....(sounds like somebody else covering 'Peaches')

    • @cfibb
      @cfibb 8 місяців тому

      @@stevelindstedt8858It is FZ, just Shazam’d yet there was no particular album listed. Probably it is “Peaches III” from Tinsel Town Rebellion or Another recording from that era as you can hear the choir vocals played by Tommy Mars (on the vocoder).

  • @Ultra-Luminary
    @Ultra-Luminary 7 місяців тому

    When One discovers Fractals before anyone else!

  • @finddeniro
    @finddeniro Рік тому

    He had it tough during WW2..However .Stay out of the Camps..His Teacher died in a Camp...
    Humbled Man..

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack7137 Рік тому

    Escher & Dali 4 me!

  • @Aliwoof23
    @Aliwoof23 5 років тому

    man mc escher was dope

  • @tykjenffs
    @tykjenffs Рік тому +2

    Math is everywhere ^

  • @pchabanowich
    @pchabanowich Рік тому

    💐

  • @sastenashe_yt8802
    @sastenashe_yt8802 2 роки тому

    Yo the drawings are cool

  • @JeighNeither
    @JeighNeither Місяць тому

    I wonder what Penrose thinks of Alex Grey's work?

  • @tchilds1521
    @tchilds1521 6 років тому +2

    In the m c Escher holding the shiny sphere - Escher looks very like another of my favourite artists - John Byrne - does anyone else agree - or is it just me ?

  • @not2tees
    @not2tees 5 років тому

    There's an esc key on the computer keyboard but it only leads to the ape not her.

  • @worstxb1playertylerteehc635
    @worstxb1playertylerteehc635 Рік тому +1

    Peaches en Regalia Frank Zappa 9:38 another genius

  • @shadowjack8
    @shadowjack8 Рік тому +1

    It appears that he may have been using fractals before they were a thing.

  • @ronm3245
    @ronm3245 Рік тому +1

    I like how Escher basically told Mick Jagger to fuck off.

  • @seriousbismuth2173
    @seriousbismuth2173 6 років тому

    Really... Zappa?...Fuck I love mathematics and art history. Great tastes all around!

  • @268gam
    @268gam 6 років тому +3

    Anyone know the song at the end?

  • @MichaelOdomwest16thAve
    @MichaelOdomwest16thAve Рік тому

    Seems many advanced mathematicians think in art or reference it often.

  • @napoleoneinstein2487
    @napoleoneinstein2487 6 років тому +4

    WARNING! Do not look at any of Escher's work when tripping..you may never come back..

    • @christophec6992
      @christophec6992 6 років тому +2

      Napoleon Einstein sometimes you need to loose yourself to find yourself.Reality is what you make of it.Defy logic, the predominant paradigm but accept it for what "it" is.Relative to personal perception perspective .In the final years of life; if were so lucky ; everything we've amassed will slowly and surely fade to become a distant memory vaguely remembered.We return to our childhood in a sense without youth , but wisdom from experience and experience from bad judgement and the occasional brief moment of clarity .Enjoy the ride .Dont cling to who you think you are.Enjoy the moment but dont dwell or ruminate there and let life pass you by ;be cautious ,develop forsight long term planning but dont expect it only the worst, enjoy the disapointnent and the guaranty life will bring hardship and it will take it away like everything that will be ,would be ,could be, should've,was is and has been.We amass -a mess- of pretty things, a burden of possesion ,obsession, of things- that bring -a moment to pass a bond we all share together ........maybe

    • @deedubs602
      @deedubs602 5 років тому

      Napoleon Einstein that’s exactly how I found Escher who is now my favorite artist of all time. My walls are covered with his prints.

  • @jdnelson9114
    @jdnelson9114 4 роки тому +1

    I just appreciate his creative genius ... have long appreciated the beauty of fractals ... An appreciation of the creative mind brings me to appreciate the creation, itself ... and the Infinite mind of the Almighty God whose personal name is Jehovah. Romans 1:20 encapsulates the power witness that is being made all around us as we understand the complexity of the micro and macro of existence ... which is our finite understanding of an Infinite Mind that has none of the limitations we struggle with. jw.org

  • @D0S81
    @D0S81 Рік тому

    2:17 i always knew that MC Escher was really just a time traveling Jordan Peterson

  • @thatsmadness1865
    @thatsmadness1865 6 років тому +2

    hmm hmm yes *sips wine* hmm yes

  • @whatwouldjeebusdo377
    @whatwouldjeebusdo377 6 років тому

    wheres the secret knowledge?

    • @whatwouldjeebusdo377
      @whatwouldjeebusdo377 6 років тому

      not seein it but thnx

    • @differous01
      @differous01 6 років тому

      Escher's art (like Islamic tiles, Celtic knot-work...) follows rules which, initially at least, are difficult for the layman to grasp so as to reproduce them. We can all enjoy the aesthetic of the art without knowing the mathematical 'secret' which makes it possible.

    • @whatwouldjeebusdo377
      @whatwouldjeebusdo377 6 років тому

      hey i love escher too but theres no mathematical secret. its only an optical illusion. theres no secret, no hidden symbolism, no undercurrent, no deep meaning. just trompe d' loeille, 'difficult for the layman to grasp' yah ok lol

    • @differous01
      @differous01 6 років тому

      "hey i love escher ... its only an optical illusion... just trompe d' loeille"
      So... you "love" Escher but not his optical illusions OR his technique? How strange.

  • @naedolor
    @naedolor 7 років тому +4

    All I could say for half an hour after watching these patterns is What The Actual Fuck? This is not possible. What the fuck?

  • @beachcomber2008
    @beachcomber2008 6 років тому +1

    M. C. Esher and Frank Zappa had a lot in common.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Рік тому

      @beachcomber2008 - although his style was completely different, Zappa was also a visual artist.

  • @Joshualbm
    @Joshualbm 4 роки тому

    Holographic principles.

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack7137 Рік тому

    💊 Tripping... 🤔

  • @silentwitness9255
    @silentwitness9255 Рік тому

    2:15, looks like Jordan Peterson 😳 lol

  • @rkrw576
    @rkrw576 6 років тому +2

    It is indeed visually arresting and mathematically fascinating, but rather cold and impersonal.

  • @007KrausBean
    @007KrausBean 6 років тому +1

    Why is Zappa music used in this if Zappa never used any Escher art in his albums? And, no credit given to Zappa at all. Shameful.

    • @SeanONilbud
      @SeanONilbud 6 років тому

      Why would you be shamed you know nothing dunce.

    • @xenontesla122
      @xenontesla122 6 років тому

      His music may be in the "Hollywood Drones" archive listed in the credits.

  • @MisterNiles
    @MisterNiles Рік тому

    I wonder what would have happened if Escher had smoked dmt.

    • @vandaahll
      @vandaahll Рік тому +1

      We would have no MC Escher art

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Рік тому

      @MisterNiles - He would have spent all day in a sleepy haze instead of thinking and drwaing.

  • @MorpheusOne
    @MorpheusOne 3 роки тому

    @Art Documentaries: Uploading this documentary in two videos was, and still is, a very dumb thing to do.

  • @Dreddwinner
    @Dreddwinner Рік тому

    🥪

  • @stefan2005stefan
    @stefan2005stefan 6 років тому +1

    The earth is flat

  • @sebastianmelmoth685
    @sebastianmelmoth685 4 роки тому

    I have always found his art to be excruciatingly boring. In the end, it is mostly just wallpaper. Art that fails to communicate feeling with human immediacy and emotion... is ultimately design and not art.

    • @hds66nl29
      @hds66nl29 3 роки тому +3

      I understand your point, but it is personal, you may find it boring, others may find it fascinating. A lot of people find it beautifull, inspiring etc and the man definitely had skills so I think labeling it as art is quite accurate.

  • @janinegaylard9233
    @janinegaylard9233 5 років тому +3

    This combination of art and math is the reason I became a textile designer!