NewsLab
Apr 29 02:52 UTC

Hokusai and Tesselations (dl.ndl.go.jp)

148 points|by srean||16 comments|Read full story on dl.ndl.go.jp

Comments (16)

16 shown
  1. 1. srean||context
    Escher invoking Hokusai in his sixties

    "Ideally I would spend a whole year on a freighter watching the waves. If God himself, in honour of my 60th birthday, would give me the strength and the power and the glory, now and forever, to draw a beautiful wave. But no, nothing like that. As soon as I got home I tried it, to no avail. I started spirals instead. That at least gave me something to go on. Drawing waves—those apparently shapeless, chaotic glories—is something I will have to leave to you and your (almost ex-)compatriots."

    https://escherinhetpaleis.nl/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fp...

  2. 2. p1anecrazy||context
    Is there a way for non-Japanese speakers to experience this?
  3. 3. srean||context
    I used google translate.
  4. 4. omoikane||context
    It's mostly pictures and not much text, except for the initial popup you see which is the usual cookie consent prompt (left button = minimum required, right button = agree to all). But looks like British Museum also has this book if you want an English interface:

    https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_1973-0723-...

    If you are asking about the text written on the pages themselves, it takes a bit more effort unless you are familiar with archaic script. I can make out some of them as guidelines on how to draw the patterns.

  5. 5. srik||context
    There is a i18n “English” button on top right. Unless you meant something else.
  6. 6. gyomu||context
    If it makes you feel better, the vast majority of modern day Japanese speakers cannot read this either.

    It is cursive script, and only specialized academics/people with extensive training in calligraphy/etc. would know how to read it.

    Interestingly enough this is an area where machine learning has been extremely effective:

    https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09433

  7. 7. lioeters||context
    Found a copy of the book on Wikimedia. It was originaly published as a pattern book for kimono textile, then rediscovered in 1986 in a collection at the Boston Museum. Since then art historians in Japan found further prints.

    北斎模様画譜 (1884) - Hokusai Pattern Book - https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=File%3ANDL85...

  8. 8. srean||context
    Could you check the URL ? I think something broke during the copy and paste
  9. 9. masfuerte||context
  10. 10. pentaphobe||context
  11. 11. lioeters||context
    Oops, I think it's fixed now. (;
  12. 12. srean||context
    They seem to have reversed how Japanese books flip.
  13. 13. mrkpdl||context
    You can download a full resolution pdf of the book at the original posts’s link, which is much better quality than the one on Wikimedia.

    I used safari’s built in translate feature to translate the page from Japanese to English, scroll down for download options.

  14. 14. cubefox||context
    See also:

    https://ndlsearch.ndl.go.jp/en/imagebank/theme/hokusaimoyo

    Hokusai Moyo Gafu: an album of dyeing patterns (ndl.go.jp) 170 points by fanf2 10 months ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44224992

  15. 15. srean||context
    Ah! This HN post must have been where I had seen this first. Thanks for the comment.
  16. 16. fmajid||context
    There's an ongoing debate as to whether the Alhambra features all 17 plane symmetry groups. It would be interesting to see whether Hokusai did.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallpaper_group