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Painting - Golden Rectangle

American History Museum

Golden Rectangle
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  • Golden Rectangle
  • Diagram from Page 131 of E.G. Valens, The Number of Things
  • Diagram for Paintings Golden Rectangle (Pythagoras) and Golden Rectangle

    Object Details

    painter

    Johnson, Crockett

    Description

    Crockett Johnson annotated several diagrams in his copy of Valens’s book The Number of Things, and used a few of them as the basis of paintings. This is one example. It shows three golden rectangles, the curves from a compass used to construct the rectangles, and a section of a five-pointed Pythagorean star.
    Euclid showed in his Elements that it is possible to divide a line segment into two smaller segments wherein the ratio of the whole length to the longer part equals the ratio of the longer part to the smaller. He used this theorem in his construction of a regular pentagon. This ratio came to be called the “golden ratio.”
    A golden rectangle is a rectangle whose sides adhere to the golden ratio (in modern terms, the ratio of its length to its width equals (1 + √(5) ) /2, or about 1.62). The golden rectangle is described as the rectangle whose proportions are most pleasing to the eye.
    This painting shows the relationship between a golden rectangle and a five-pointed Pythagorean star by constructing the star from the rectangle. It follows a diagram on the top of page 131 in Evans G. Valens, The Number of Things. This diagram is annotated. Valens describes a geometrical solution to the two expressions f x f = e x c and f = e - c, and associates it with the Pythagoreans. The right triangle on the upper part of Valens's drawing, with the short side and part of the hypotenuse equal to f, is shown facing to the left in the painting. It can be constructed from a square with side equal to the shorter side of the rectangle. Two of the smaller rectangles in the painting are also golden rectangles. Crockett Johnson also includes in the background the star shown by Valens and related lines.
    This painting on masonite, #64 in the series, dates from 1970 and is signed: CJ70. It also is marked on the back: ”GOLDEN RECTANGLE (/) Crockett Johnson 1970. It is executed in two hues of gold to emphasize individual sections. While this method creates a detailed and organized contrast, it disguises the three rectangles and the star. Compare paintings 1979.1093.33 (#46) and 1979.1093.70 (#103).
    Reference: Evans G. Valens, The Number of Things (1964), p. 131.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Ruth Krauss in memory of Crockett Johnson

    date made

    1970

    ID Number

    1979.1093.39

    accession number

    1979.1093

    catalog number

    1979.1093.39

    Object Name

    painting

    Physical Description

    masonite (substrate material)
    wood (frame material)

    Measurements

    overall: 91.5 cm x 67 cm x 5 cm; 36 in x 26 3/8 in x 1 15/16 in

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Mathematics
    Science & Mathematics
    Crockett Johnson
    Art

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a5-2e7f-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_694663

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    About

    Painting of a isosceles triangular shape with a rounded base. Shades progress from dark to lighter tints of purple to show pendulum motion

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