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Painting - Problem of Delos Constructed from a Solution by Isaac Newton (Arithmetica Universalis)

American History Museum

Problem of Delos Constructed from a Solution by Isaac Newton (Arithmetica Universalis)
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  • Problem of Delos Constructed from a Solution by Isaac Newton (Arithmetica Universalis)
  • Diagram for Painting Problem of Delos Constructed from a Solution by Isaac Newton (Arithmetica Universalis)

    Object Details

    referenced

    Newton, Isaac

    painter

    Johnson, Crockett

    Description

    Two paintings in the Crockett Johnson collection concern the ancient problem of doubling the volume of a given cube, or the problem of Delos. Crockett Johnson wrote of this problem: "Plutarch mentions it, crediting as his source a now lost version of the legend written by the third century BC Alexandrian Greek astronomer Eratosthenes, who first measured the size of the Earth. Suffering from plague, Athens sent a delegation to Delos, Apollo’s birthplace, to consult its oracle. The oracle’s instruction to the Athenians, to double the size of their cubical altar stone, presented an impossible problem. . . ."(p. 99). Hence the reference to the problem of Delos in the title of the painting.
    Isaac Newton suggested a solution to the problem in his book Arithmetica Universalis, first published in 1707. His construction served as the basis of the painting. Newton’s figure, as redrawn by Crockett Johnson, begins with a base (OA), bisected at a point (B), with an equilateral triangle (OCB) constructed on one of the halves of the base. Newton then extended the sides of this triangle through one vertex. Placing a marked straightedge at one end of the base (O), he rotated the rule so that the distance between the two lines extended equaled the sides of the triangle (in the figure, DE = OB = BA = OC = BC). If these line segments are of length one, one can show that the line segment OD is of length equal to the cube root of two, as desired.
    In Crockett Johnson’s painting, the line OA slants across the bottom and the line ODE is vertical on the left. The four squares drawn from the upper left corner (point E) have sides of length 1, the cube root of 2, the cube root of 4, and two. The distance DE (1) represents the edge of the side and the volume of a unit cube, while the sides of three larger squares represent the edge (the cube root of 2), the side (the square of the cube root of 2) and the volume (the cube of the cube root of two) of the doubled cube.
    This oil painting on masonite is #56 in the series and dates from 1970. The work is signed: CJ70. It is inscribed on the back: PROBLEM OF DELOS (/) CONSTRUCTED FROM A SOLUTION BY (/) ISAAC NEWTON (ARITHMETICA UNIVERSALIS) (/) Crockett Johnson 1970. The painting has a wood and metal frame. For related documentation see 1979.3083.04.06. See also painting number 85 (1979.1093.55), with the references given there.
    Reference: Crockett Johnson, “On the Mathematics of Geometry in My Abstract Paintings,” Leonardo 5 (1972): pp. 98–9.

    Credit Line

    Ruth Krauss in memory of Crockett Johnson

    date made

    1970

    ID Number

    1979.1093.36

    catalog number

    1979.1093.36

    accession number

    1979.1093

    Object Name

    painting

    Physical Description

    masonite (substrate material)
    wood (frame material)
    metal (frame material)

    Measurements

    overall: 100 cm x 84 cm x 3.5 cm; 39 3/8 in x 33 1/16 in x 1 3/8 in

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Mathematics
    Science & Mathematics
    Crockett Johnson
    Art

    Exhibition

    NMAH Board Room Entry

    Exhibition Location

    National Museum of American History

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a5-3772-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_694660

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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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