Goudreau Museum of Mathematics in Art and Science
Established | 1980 |
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Dissolved | 2006 |
Location | Herricks Community Center 999 Herricks Road New Hyde Park, New York, United States |
Director | Beth Deaner (ca. 2000-2004); Tom Lucas (2004-2006) |
The Goudreau Museum of Mathematics in Art and Science was a museum of math that was open from 1980 to 2006 in Long Island, New York.[1] The museum was named after mathematics teacher Bernhard Goudreau, who died in 1985, and featured many of the 3-dimensional solid models, oversized wooden math games, and puzzles built by Goudreau and his former students.[2] After the museum closed, Glen Whitney, a former math professor, decided to open the Museum of Mathematics in Manhattan (New York City), which opened in December 2012.[3]
References
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Mathematics and art
- Algorithm
- Catenary
- Fractal
- Golden ratio
- Hyperboloid structure
- Minimal surface
- Paraboloid
- Perspective
- Camera lucida
- Camera obscura
- Plastic ratio
- Projective geometry
- Proportion
- Architecture
- Human
- Symmetry
- Tessellation
- Wallpaper group
- List of works designed with the golden ratio
- Continuum
- Mathemalchemy
- Mathematica: A World of Numbers... and Beyond
- Octacube
- Pi
- Pi in the Sky
- Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Assumption
- Hagia Sophia
- Pantheon
- Parthenon
- Pyramid of Khufu
- Sagrada Família
- Sydney Opera House
- Taj Mahal
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19th–20th Century |
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Contemporary |
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Ancient | |
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Renaissance |
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Romantic |
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Modern |
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- Journal of Mathematics and the Arts
- Lumen Naturae
- Making Mathematics with Needlework
- Rhythm of Structure
- Viewpoints: Mathematical Perspective and Fractal Geometry in Art
- Ars Mathematica
- The Bridges Organization
- European Society for Mathematics and the Arts
- Goudreau Museum of Mathematics in Art and Science
- Institute For Figuring
- Mathemalchemy
- National Museum of Mathematics
- Category