Color Theory: What’s the deal with the palettes I’m using?


by @beet_keeper

Following a recent conversation, I wanted to write this blog to add some final pieces of context to my current interest in color palettes.

Binary Numbers

The Binary Numbers project was changed earlier this year following Trump’s inauguration. The original was inspired by simple musings on Data as Art. It was updated again in 2014 after the work had stalled due to technical reasons. I increased the complexity of the images, and incorporated Heritage Color Palettes.

But the end of last year and the beginning of this were exhausting. Two months were spent in protest:

But it seems that this alone was not able to tear the wheels off a tanker in Tienanmen Square… and so I decided on something uplifting. For myself, and for the viewer.

Cinema Palettes was a fantastic Twitter account that takes a scene (not necessarily iconic) from a film and analyses the scene’s colors, presenting back to us, the palette used.

I had been following it for a while and I became curious as to what I might be able to do with it in the configuration of my Binary Numbers.

And so from January this year I adapted the Cinema Palettes concept into this work starting with 50 new color palettes.

Continue reading “Color Theory: What’s the deal with the palettes I’m using?”

#3 #4 #art #binary #binaryNumbers #binarynumbers #cinema #cinemapalette #color #colorPalettes #data #digitalHumanities #generativeArt #heritagecolorpalette #modernart #painterGoblin #paintergoblin #saturation #themet #twitterBot #visualization #zine #zines

Very well written article about a recent mathematical proof using the verification tool, Lean, that puts a polynomial cap on sumset size
#lean #math #settheory #informationtheory #entropy #combinatorics #binarynumbers

‘A-Team’ of Math Proves a Critical Link Between Addition and Sets, by Leila Sloman

https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-team-of-math-proves-a-critical-link-between-addition-and-sets-20231206/

‘A-Team’ of Math Proves a Critical Link Between Addition and Sets | Quanta Magazine

A team of four prominent mathematicians, including two Fields medalists, proved a conjecture described as a “holy grail of additive combinatorics.”

Quanta Magazine
I remember doing all sorts of crafts with glue & paper learning fractions but never did we try dividing the paper to infinity— I think this should be something everyone tries. I’d do this with calculus students learning series! The idea of an infinite sum having finite value is just more— believable after you really do it. And I’m trying to get these 6th graders to like fractions. So they just can’t be BORING— #mathEducation #mathematics #series #geometricSeries #binaryNumbers #artsAndCrafts

"John William Shirley (1908–1988) published reproductions of two of Harriot’s undated manuscript pages, which, he claimed, showed that Harriot had invented binary numeration “nearly a century before Leibniz’s time”"

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00283-023-10271-9

Via Hacker News [ https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35663799 ]

#History #Mathematics #Numbers #NumberSystems #BinaryNumbers

Why Did Thomas Harriot Invent Binary? - The Mathematical Intelligencer

SpringerLink
In 1679, centuries before they became useful in computers, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz invented binary numbers. #Poetry #Science #History #Mathematics #BinaryNumbers #Leibniz (https://sharpgiving.com/thebookofscience/items/p1679.html)
1679: Binary number - The book of science

In 1679, centuries before they became useful in computers, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz invented binary numbers.

In 1679, centuries before they became useful in computers, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz invented binary numbers. #Poetry #History #Science #Mathematics #BinaryNumbers #Leibniz (https://sharpgiving.com/thebookofscience/items/p1679.html)
1679: Binary number - The book of science

In 1679, centuries before they became useful in computers, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz invented binary numbers.