![]() ![]() Another area lets visitors frustratingly try to construct an impossible triangle. The Escher Room is setup to have two people standing in opposite corners, one looking gigantic and one looking much smaller. The third floor is a virtual reality multimedia world where visitors can experience and become part of the art. Shaped as skull and crossbones, umbrella, dolphin, seahorse and more, the chandeliers add a beautiful touch to the abundance of Escher’s drawings. The rooms are lit by the graceful addition of fifteen artistic chandeliers designed for the museum by the Dutch sculptor Hans Van Bentem. Metamorphosis pictures reveal birds seamlessly changing to fish and back again while another shows horses converting into fish. ![]() Bizarrely the lower floor features a gaol where a prisoner’s pleas fall on deaf ears. Columns connect erratically while a man sits relaxed on a bench idly challenged by a strange cube. My personal favourite is Belvedere where a ladder from inside a building looks natural but is enabling someone to climb to the outside of the same building. In a similar vein, Escher’s Ascending and Descending shows a set of four connecting staircases where people are either permanently walking up the stairs or down the stairs. Closer inspection shows that the left tower is one storey higher than the right tower, though both look the same height. Waterfall features flowing water which drives a watermill wheel where the water impossibly continues to flow downhill. The first floor covers his early works of more traditional landscapes but the second floor displays Escher’s finest works. I knew of Escher’s works through a special mathematics display I attended many years ago and was pleased to know that Escher’s treasured works finally went on display in a historic Dutch Palace in the nation’s political capital in 2002 (and only an hour’s travel from Amsterdam).Īt first it seemed strange to place such modern and challenging surreal works in a mid-1700s royal palace, but the wide open uncluttered rooms leave plenty of space to enjoy the strange pictures. Escher’s works mainly feature lithographs of impossible shapes, metamorphosing figures, imaginary worlds and strange perspectives. Entering the travel wonder of the Escher Museum in The Hague (Den Haag) is to enter a world of optical illusion.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |