Mathematics
The mathematician is out to show the close link between maths and the arts. This idea isn’t new, and while Blueprints is lyrical on maths, it falls a bit flat when it comes to covering artists
Le Corbusier used Fibonacci sequences in his building designs, like this one in Marseille, France
Chris Hellier/Alamy
Blueprints
Marcus du Sautoy (Fourth Estate (UK, out now); Basic Books (US, 16 September))
Marcus Du Sautoy wants us to see mathematics and art as inextricably connected. “Both are creating ways to interpret, understand, and navigate our place in the universe,” he begins his new book, Blueprints: How mathematics shapes creativity.
I’m not sure who still doubts this, nearly a century after Albert Einstein and his violin; this book feels a little redundant in a time of ample high-profile collaborations between du Sautoy’s “two cultures” of emotions and…
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