Van Gogh Painted Turbulence 76
rangeva writes "Nature is reporting that Van Gogh works have a pattern of light and dark that closely follows the mathematical structure of turbulent flow. From the article: 'Vincent van Gogh is known for his chaotic paintings and similarly tumultuous state of mind. Now a mathematical analysis of his works reveals that the stormy patterns in many of his paintings are uncannily like real turbulence, as seen in swirling water or the air from a jet engine.'"
So much for fine art... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Funny would have been a more adequate moderatio (Score:2)
Re:Funny would have been a more adequate moderatio (Score:2)
I like to enjoy art... (Score:1)
I like van Gogh, the article is somewhat interresting, but I enjoy the paintings without the mathematical analysis better.
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:1)
That's someone's living you're dissing! Not everyone can get a productive job, so if your tax money is being spent keeping some potential crack-head on the straight and narrow, writing pointless papers and theses about nothing, then surely it's better than you spending it on your own choice of...uh, wait, that's not right...
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:1)
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:1)
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:2)
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:1)
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:2)
Re:I like to enjoy art... (Score:1)
But then again, maybe that's why I'm not a true nerd...
Amazing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Amazing (Score:4, Funny)
Many variables involved.
Quantity and quality of paint thinner sniffed this morning.
Quantity and quality of absint drank with coffee for breakfast
Quantity and quality of the dirt on the knife used to cut your year off causing a infection of the remaining stump
Quantity and quality...
Dunno, while I like Van Gough and I would not go for his methods of achieving artistic inspiration.
Intuited? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Intuited? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Intuited? (Score:5, Interesting)
more info on the science of his sworls? (Score:1)
Re:more info on the science of his sworls? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:more info on the science of his sworls? (Score:2)
The simplest way to see Kolmogorov scaling is to posit that the effect of viscosity in turbulence occurs only at the smallest lengthscale, and that aside from that energy must be shuttled via conservative mechanisms up and down between lengthscales. That is, energy is only dissipated at the smallest scale, so large scale
Re:more info on the science of his sworls? (Score:1)
Re:more info on the science of his sworls? (Score:2)
There are some visible differences between 2D and 3D turbulence though. 2D turbulence is marked by point vortices that form various correlated structures, but a lot of the turbulence is just carried by the interactions between point vortices of different sizes.
In 3D, those vortices become threads, and they can get tangled up and so on. Vorticity is no longer conserved and so you have things li
Re: more info on the science of his sworls? (Score:2)
shocking: you can see turbulence (Score:1, Redundant)
No you can't (Score:5, Insightful)
Seeing turbulence itself takes more than having the image of a turbulent phenomenon on your retina. That takes place at a higher level of the brain, one that is more imaginative. Artists don't "see" in the way a camera sees. not even photographers, who must search for the right opportunity where what they are looking for can be stripped naked of irrelevant detail.
Painters especially don't just record what they see. They abstract salient details and present them in ways that emphasize or deemphasize. Even the most routine of painters will move a tree in a landscape or improve on a train of clouds in order to produce a more pleasing rhtyhm. But what we are talking about here goes way beyond that.
Naturally, any realistic depiction of landscape will reproduce mathematical relationships, such as the fractal geometry of waves. But only a master like Hokusai can make a wave whose fractal nature is burned into our memory.
Works such as "The Great Wave Off Kanagawa" by Hokusai, or "Starry Night" by Van Goh are not realistic, they are hyper-real. It takes a great drafting skill to paint what is there, yet while it is a talent, it is not genius. Go out and look at some waves or some swirling smoke then try to think how difficult it is to freeze such a moving, evolving phenomenon and boil it down to its perceptual essence. That take genius.
The reason art is valuable to the human race is that it show us how to be aware of what is latent in our perception, but does not enter into our consciousness.
Other causes for his paintings (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Other causes for his paintings (Score:2)
VanGogh (Score:1)
Bah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bah (Score:2)
Newton (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Newton (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Newton (Score:1, Insightful)
Then it's a good thing that your particular gene combination remained unexpressed until after Newton; if it had been widespread while mankind was still in the Stone Age, humanity would have died out from not being able to hit prey with rocks and spears. And think of all the events of history that would have turned out different if people couldn't get
Re:Newton (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Newton (Score:5, Insightful)
However, most people can't render a decent image of a lit box -- not just the outline of a box, but an image of the light that the box reflects. I think it would be fair to say that Van Gogh probably spent a long time looking at, studying, and rendering these turbulent systems. In short, he taught himself the laws.
Re:Newton (Score:4, Informative)
It seems to be software actually.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2002/18mar_pla
I'd argue that 30+ years of training makes it quite difficult to adjust, but I'm not NASA.
Re:Newton (Score:1)
Re:Newton (Score:2)
If they just wait a while they can make an image of a small heap of charcoal. Most people can manage that.
Re:Newton (Score:2)
I'd hazard to say that the laws, or some mathematical approximation, are learned by the incredibly adaptable and flexible human nervous system, over the first few years of life which are usually spent picking up objects, dropping them and also throwing them at your siblings.
Re:Newton (Score:1)
Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:5, Interesting)
Van Gogh lived from 1853 until 1890, so man-made turbines existed during his lifetime, as well as the more natural effects he will have seen that others have mentioned.
Ergo, the entire point of the article is moot, he painted what he saw and understood, that - believe it or not - is what artists do. Why people have to waste their time trying to comprehend why Van Gogh painted turbulence is beyond me...
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:1)
It's more akin to the prevalence of the Golden Ratio in art and aesthetics. It's wor
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:1)
In essence, this study is not asking "can an artist paint something that looks turbulent" inasmuch as they are saying that during his psychotic stages, van Gogh captured turbulence with a degree of accuracy not found in other works by artists of his caliber.
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:5, Informative)
"Van Gogh seems to be the only painter able to render turbulence with such mathematical precision. "We have examined other apparently turbulent paintings of several artists and find no evidence of Kolmogorov scaling," says Aragon.
Edvard Munch's The Scream, for example, looks to be superficially full of van Gogh-like swirls, and was painted by a similarly tumultuous artist, but the luminance probability distribution doesn't fit Kolmogorov's theory."
So, if other artists were looking at turbulence and painting it, they failed, only Van Gogh was able to do it.
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:1)
"Publish or Perish?"
But yes, the idea that Van Gogh, at a time when he was most divorced from reality, created things of such mathematical precision is very interesting, particularly as an example of the union of madness and genius.
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:1)
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:2)
1. Smoke, Drink
2. Go psychotic and Paint
3. Die
4. Profit!!!
postscript: I've discovered that the "???" in most cases is "die"
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:2)
Re:Let's have a look at the history behind this... (Score:2)
Actually, that isn't necessarily what artists do. Since the earliest cave paintings to Venus de Milo to modern cartoons, artists paint representations of what they see (with their real eyes or mind's eye) with varying degrees of attempted and actual accuracy. Trying to rigorously paint "what one sees" -- though still with large amounts of abstraction and representation -- was
Why does this have to be intentional? (Score:2)
Why does all of this mean Van Gogh new that he was painting turbulence? Why can this not just be a byproduct of the way that he holds the brush and moves the brush on the canvas?
I bet that somewhere out there is a cave drawing where the patterns on the rock are a p
Re:Why does this have to be intentional? (Score:1)
Re:Why does this have to be intentional? (Score:2)
"Well, because I invented these diagrams. I'm Richard Feynman."
If you meet a man with fuzzy black holes on his wheelchair, he might be...
Re:Why does this have to be intentional? (Score:1)
Re:Why does this have to be intentional? (Score:2)
The bridge between science and art is that of conscious decision, science has always been about coming to some recognition about the world around us where we can say 'yes, I understand'. Art seems to be a recognition tho
It's only natural (Score:3, Insightful)
Another case of "idiot" savants in action. (Score:2)
Pollock and fractals (Score:4, Interesting)
This article reminds me of a similar study done on Jackson Pollock's drip paintings, which exhibit the characteristics of fractals. Pollock painted in the '50s, before fractal geometry was developed. Works by other artists, who imitated Pollock's technique, do not have the same qualities. Both Van Gogh and Pollock seem to have been able to perceive the mathematical underpinnings of the natural world in an intuitive way, and could communicate that perception through their art.
Some more info [nathanielclark.org] (PDF warning).
myopic realism (Score:1)
1. Van Gogh may have simply had about -4.50 myopia and was painting realism...
2. The Starry Night painting at the MoMA in NYC looks like crap... small, unfinished at the edges, and not
breathtaking like certain other Van Gogh paintings I've seen. The posters are better than the original.
.. or perhaps.. (Score:2)
Question of scientific study (Score:2)
Van Gogh's ability to properly depict (even closely) one of Nature's most chaotic of events only implies that somehow, his brain was able to calculate his efforts. Without getting into pseudo-science, crystals and all that biz; it is rather obvious that those who extend deep into the extremes of various mental illnesses or retardations display extrodinary abilities, such as high level autism.
Without any psychology or neuroscience, I speculate that perhaps such abilities are so taxing that their brains aren
harder than quantum mechanics (Score:2)
What is that supposed to mean? Quantum mechanics appears on undergraduate mathematics, physics and chemistry courses. Almost every university offers such courses and probably dozens, if not hundreds, of people graduate from each of these universities having completed courses in QM. I expect that a reasonable proportion of /. readers are among these people. Sure, it can be tricky stuff sometimes. But you don't need to be some kind of genius to understand it -