Leonardo
Volume 30, No. 2 (1997)
Issue Contents
April/May 1994
Leonardo is a print journal, edited by Leonardo/the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, and published by the MIT Press. Subscriptions and individual issues can be ordered from the MIT Press.
TO ORDER
Editorial
David Topper: The Neutrino and the Sydney Opera House
Artist's Note
Brent Collins: Evolving an Aesthetic of Surface Economy in Sculpture
Technical Articles
Carlo H. Sequin: Virtual Prototyping of Scherk-Collins Saddle Rings
Jurgen Schmidhuber: Low-Complexity Art
Kim Williams: Michelangelo's Medici Chapel: The Cube, the Square and the Root-2 Rectangle
General Article
Xiaoping Lin: Those Parodic Images: A Glimpse of Contemporary Chinese Art
General Notes
David Carrier: Thinking Things Through Historically
George Gessert: The Rainforests of Domestication: Ornamental Gardens as Sites of Maximum Genetic Diversity among Domesticated Plants
Historical Perspectives
Cretien van Campen: Early Abstract Art and Experimental Gestalt Psychology
Theoretical Perspectives
John Haworth: Beyond Reason: Pre-Reflexive Thought and Creativity in Art
Rodney Douglas Parker: The Architectonics of Memory: On Built Form and Built Thought
Art/Science Forum
David S. Goodsell and T.J. O'Donnell: Molecular Graphics Art Show
Andrey E. Shumilov: Artificial Audiovisual Environment for Developing Creative Abilities of Children
Document
Francois Molnar: A Science of Vision for Visual Art
Artists' Statements
Yvonne Robare Hobbs and Mary Ross: Video, Sculpture and Collaborative Image Processing
David Fricks: Celebration of the Great Red Spot (GRS 79)
Reviews
Rudolf Arnheim, Istvan Hargittai
Endnote
Paulina Boorsook: Something about Art
About the Cover
Claude Berge, The Smoking Clones, bronze, 50 x 50 cm, 1964--1965. In addition to the pattern of legs/arms suggesting a maximum number of projected squares, a particularity of this piece is that when two lit cigarettes are put into the mouths, the clones smoke them up very quickly (without dropping the ashes).