Entertainment

Machine Draws Famous Mathematicians with the Math They Invented

In programmer Will Gallia’s Space Filling Portraits, complex mathematics become minimalistic portraits that even the most left-brained of us can enjoy. Using a Roland DXY 980 pen plotter custom-programmed with OpenFrameworks, Gallia depicts five mathematicians’ portraits out of the space-filling curves they invented. In simple colors on plain white paper, the programmer “takes a raster image, posterizes it using K-means [clustering, a signal processing technique], then plots the path of a space-filling curve in different pens for the shades.”

Gallia’s illustrations honor mathematical theorists David Hilbert, Claude Shannon, John Von Neumann, Bill Gosper, and, in a tri-colored tribute, Giuseppe Peano, the father of space-filling curves.

Videos by VICE

Watch as Gallia and his Roland fill in the beards and bushy eyebrows of these famous math minds, below:

Claude Shannon

John Von Neumann

Bill Gosper

Giuseppe Peano

David Hilbert

A portfolio of more of Gallia’s pen plotter work can be found on his Work by Roland Tumblr page.

Related:

Man vs. Machine ‘Connect Four’ Games Become Beautiful Line Drawings

“Art Of Fraud” Showcases The Simple Infographic Beauty Of Malware

Visualizing the Infinite Beauty Of Pi And Other Numbers

Thank for your puchase!
You have successfully purchased.