recent events helaman ferguson sculpture
the artist
gallery

Costa V/NIST SP-2

Installation:
Original marble carving in collection of Rosemary Chang, bronze in collection of Philippe and Claire Tondeur.
Exhibitions:
Joint meetings of the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Association of America, 1998; National Science Foundation, 1999-2001
Dimensions:
30" x 24" x 16"
Weight:
120 lbs
Materials:
Reproduction in silicon bronze, allow 9-12 weeks
Price:
$8,400 (USD)
Copyright Notice:
©1996
Copyright Registered:
1996
This piece was carved by innovative technology developed by a CRADA between the artist's studio and the intelligent systems group at NIST, SP-2. This sculpture was inspired by the discovery of a Brazilian mathematics graduate student Celsoe Costa, who was in turn allegedly inspired by the twirling of a street dancer's skirt, formulated the equations describing a minimal surface with one hole, a triply punctured torus as a minimal surface.
This sculpture exemplifies applied mathematics over the course of the past two centuries: start with physical observations about soap films in nature (Plateau), write down a differential equation model describing area minimizing surfaces (Euler-Lagrange), define a minimal surface geometrically in terms of curvature (Gauss), discover a minimal surface with non-trivial topology (Costa), draw computer images of the surface (Hoffman-Hoffman), recognize symmetry and prove the surface has no self intersections (Hoffman-Meeks), discover fast parametric equations for the surface (Gray), and finally return to nature with a sculpture, a solid form of a 'soap film' big enough to touch and climb on. The CRADA between NIST and my studio is a vehicle for applying new technological tools to create aesthetic objects.

(Ferguson, Helaman, Sam Ferguson, Alfred Gray, Claire Ferguson Costa IV Minimal Surface: Sculpture by Virtual Image Projection invited paper given at the ISIS-Symmetry Conference, Washington D.C., August 12-20, 1995.)

ref., paper in Global Geometry, Alfred Gray Memorial Issue, Helaman Ferguson, " Sculpture Inspired by Alfred Gray " dedicated to the memory of Alfred Gray, Annals of Global Analysis and Geometry, Volume 18, 2000, pages 341-345, Five Figures.

photos by sam ferguson

copyright © 1999-2003 helaman ferguson, sculpture webmaster@helasculpt.com