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Painting - Squared Lunes (Hippocrates Of Chios)

American History Museum

Squared Lunes (Hippocrates Of Chios)
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  • Squared Lunes (Hippocrates Of Chios)
  • Diagram for Paintings Squared Lunes (Hippocrates Of Chios)
  • Diagram from Page 103 of E.G. Valens, The Number of Things

    Object Details

    referenced

    Hippocrates of Chios

    painter

    Johnson, Crockett

    Description

    Classical Greek mathematicians were able to square all convex polygons. That is, given any polygon, they could produce a square of equal area in a finite number of steps using only a compass and a straight edge. Figures with curved sides proved more difficult. However, as this painting suggests, the mathematician Hippocrates of Chios (5th century BC) squared a lune, a figure bounded by arcs of two circle with different radii (lunes resemble quarter moons, hence the name). Finding the area of a lune in terms of a square might seem more difficult than squaring a circle, but the latter problem would prove intractable.
    The painting follows annotated figures in Evans G. Valens's The Number of Things (1964), p.103, which was part of Crockett Johnson's mathematical library. It corresponds to an early diagram in Valens's discussion of squaring the circle. According to Valens, Hippocrates began by arguing that the areas of similar segments of different circles are in the same ratio as the squares of their bases. Suppose an isosceles right triangle is inscribed in a semicircle of diameter c. Construct smaller semicircles of diameter a and b on the sides of the inscribed triangle. As the square of a plus the square of b equals the square of c, the area of the two smaller semicircles equals that of the large one. The proof goes on to consider the area of the two crescents and the triangle.
    Although Valens called the crescent moon shape a crescent, Crockett Johnson used the term lune. This probably indicates that he also read Herbert Westren Turnball “The Great Mathematicians” in The World of Mathematics, edited by James R. Newman (1956), where the term lune is used. Also, on page page 91 of Turnball’s article there is a diagram on which the painting could have been based.
    In this version of Squared Lunes Crockett Johnson uses brown, black, red, and white against a gray background. This oil painting is #67 in the series, and the first in the series with the title "Squared Lunes." It was completed in 1968 and is signed: CJ68. It is inscribed on the back: SQUARED LUNES (/) (HIIPPOCRATES OF CHIOS) (/) Crockett Johnson 1968. A related painting is #68 (1979.1093.43).

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Ruth Krauss in memory of Crockett Johnson

    date made

    1968

    ID Number

    1979.1093.42

    accession number

    1979.1093

    catalog number

    1979.1093.42

    Object Name

    painting

    Physical Description

    masonite (substrate material)
    wood (frame material)

    Measurements

    overall: 38.2 cm x 62.5 cm x 3.2 cm; 15 1/16 in x 24 5/8 in x 1 1/4 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/ng49ca746a5-3158-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_694666

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

    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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