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Hölzel's Dynamic Circle Rhythms & The Holographic Principle

               

Comment:
L:
Hölzel's "Dynamic Circle Rhythms" (1930) is one of the artist's late works. After painting moody, traditional canvasses - like the ca. 1901 "Dachauer Moos" set against the AstroPic "Arches of Spring" -- he adopted a colourful abstract style around 1905, years before Kandinsky.
The NY dada Baroness Else von Freytag-Loringhoven (FrL) was one of his pupils in Dachau in 1900.
See the Dachau Registration Entry for "Else Ploetz" in May 1900
(Courtesy, Dr. Elisabeth Boser, July 1997). -- See also FrL Collection at the UMA)

R: The Holographic Principle stems from Strimg Theory & Quantum Mechanics. It iis applied to making holograms like the one shown here.
Those are photographic recordings of three-dimensional objects with light field- rather than optical lenses. -- (Wikipedia)

Images adapted from:
1. Adolf-Hölzel-Stiftung
, Stuttgart: "Dynamische Kreisrhythmen" (1930)
2. NASA's "Astronomy Picture of the Day," April 23, 2017 (AstroPic Description
/ by CalTech)
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Dr. Gaby Divay
Senior Scholar, Archives & Special Collections
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2
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Phone: (204) 832 2179 ; divay@cc.umanitoba.ca
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