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Painting - Mystic Hexagon (Pascal)

National Museum of American History

Object Details

referenced
Pascal, Blaise
painter
Johnson, Crockett
Description
This painting is based on a theorem generalized by the French mathematician Blaise Pascal in 1640, when he was sixteen years old. When the opposite sides of a irregular hexagon inscribed in a circle are extended, they meet in three points. Pappus, writing in the 4th century AD, had shown in his Mathematical Collections that these three points lie on the same line. In the painting, the circle and cream-colored hexagon are at the center, with the sectors associated with different pairs of lines shown in green, blue and gray. The three points of intersection are along the top; the line that would join them is not shown. Pascal generalized the theorem to include hexagons inscribed in any conic section, not just a circle. Hence the figure came to be known as "Pascal’s hexagon" or, to use Pascal’s terminology, the "mystic hexagon." Pascal’s work in this area is known primarily from notes on his manuscripts taken by the German mathematician Gottfried Leibniz after his death.
There is a discussion of Pascal’s hexagon in an article by Morris Kline on projective geometry published in James R. Newman's World of Mathematics (1956). A figure shown on page 629 of this work may have been the basis of Crockett Johnson's painting, although it is not annotated in his copy of the book.
The oil or acrylic painting on masonite is signed on the bottom right: CJ65. It is marked on the back: Crockett Johnson (/) "Mystic" Hexagon (/) (Pascal). It is #10 in the series.
References: Carl Boyer and Uta Merzbach, A History of Mathematics (1991), pp. 359–62.
Florian Cajori, A History of Elementary Mathematics (1897), 255–56.
Morris Bishop, Pascal: The Life of a Genius (1964), pp. 11, 81–7.
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Ruth Krauss in memory of Crockett Johnson
1965
ID Number
1979.1093.05
catalog number
1979.1093.05
accession number
1979.1093
Object Name
painting
Physical Description
masonite (substrate material)
wood (frame material)
metal (frame material)
Measurements
average spatial: 124.5 cm x 63.5 cm; 49 in x 25 in
See more items in
Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Science & Mathematics
Crockett Johnson
Art
National Museum of American History
Record ID
nmah_1098877
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a9-6543-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

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Mystic Hexagon (Pascal)
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