Edward Lentsch
The Ars Magna (Latin for “The Great Art”) is an important book on Algebra written by Gerolamo Cardano. It was first published in 1545 under the title Artis Magnæ, Sive de Regulis Algebraicis Liber Unus (Book number one about The Great Art, or The Rules of Algebra). There was a second edition in Cardano’s lifetime, published in 1570. It is considered[1] one of the three greatest scientific treatises of the early Renaissance, together with Copernicus’ De revovolutionibus orbium coelestium and Vesalius’ De humani corporis fabrica. The first editions of these three books were published within a two year span (1543-1545).
Ars Magna, 11ft x 16ft 6 inches
The Sawyer Effect, 120 x 80 inches From Jonah Lehrer, an illustration of the power of intrinsic motivation — the desire to do a thing because you enjoy it, rather than for any extrinsic reward like a paycheck‌
Intrinsic Motivation, 100 x 80 inches
Aristotle’s Apodicticity
Aristotle’s Apodicticity, 78 x 132 inches
“Apodictic” or “apodeictic” (Ancient Greek: “ἀποδεικτικός”, “capable of demonstration”) is an adjectival expression from Aristotelean logic that refers to propositions that are demonstrable, that are necessarily or selfevidently the case or that, conversely, are impossible.[1] Apodicticity or apodixis is the corresponding abstract noun, referring to logical certainty.
New Mysterianism, 90 x 60 inches
Bhashkara’s the Beautiful, 90 x 60 inches
Raimundus Lullus Latin Raimundus or Raymundus Lullus or Lullius) was a Majorcan writer and philosopher, logician and a Franciscan tertiary. He wrote the first major work of Catalan literature. Recently-surfaced manuscripts show him to have anticipated by several centuries, prominent work on elections theory. His first major work Art Abreujada d’Atrobar Veritat (The Abbreviated Art of Finding Truth) was written in Catalan and then translated into Latin. He wrote treatises on alchemy and botany, Ars Magna, and Llibre de meravelles. He wrote the romantic novel Blanquerna, the first major work of literature written in Catalan, and perhaps the first European novel.
Select a star rise. Figure out its signs. Reverse its root. Straighten it out with the cycle. Someone will perceive those things. He will achieve his purpose And be given their letters in whose arrangement the evidence lies...
Raimundus Lullus, 60 x 90 inches
from the Zairja‌
Lau Tzu’s Threasures I, 42 x 35 inches
Lau Tzu’s Three Treasures II, 42 x 35 inches
Argumentum ad Hominem, 100 x 80 inches
Ars Notoria, 100 x 80 inches
Concept of Mind, 54 x 76 inches
Iddhi, 46 x 40 inches
Didactic Method of Elenchus, 80 x 100 inches
Book of the Abacus Liber Abaci (1202, also spelled as Liber Abbaci) is a historic book on arithmetic by Leonardo of Pisa, known later by his nickname Fibonacci. In this work, Fibonacci introduced to Europe the Hindu-Arabic numerals, a major element of our decimal system, which he had learned by studying with Arabs while living in North Africa with his father, Guglielmo Bonaccio, who wished for him to become a merchant.
The title of Liber Abaci means “The Book of Calculation”. Although it has also been translated as “The Book of the Abacus”, Sigler (2002) writes that this is an error: the intent of the book is to describe methods of doing calculations without aid of an abacus, and as Ore (1948) confirms, for centuries after its publication the ‘algorismists’ (followers of the style of calculation demonstrated in Liber Abaci) remained in conflict with the abacists (traditionalists who continued to use the abacus in conjunction with Roman numerals).
Book of the Abacus, 100 x 80 inches
Liber Abaci was among the first Western books to describe Arabic numerals, the first being the Codex Vigilanus completed in 976; another pivotal work followed by Pope Silvester II in 999. By addressing tradesmen and academics, it began to convince the public of the superiority of the new numerals.
Ravenloft, 65 x 55 inches
Cellular Rejuvination, 80 x 60 inches
Tasso’s Three Wishes, 65 x 55 inches
Cognitive Closure, 80 x 60 inches
Adeptus Exemptus, 60 x 50 inches
The Enthemematic Argument part I, 60 x 50 inches
Neath Ancient Roslin Waits, 90 x 70 inches
Kappa Kawarto, 80 x 20 inches
The Order of the Golden Dawn, 48 x 68 inches
Fragments of the Pre-Socratics, 100 x 80 inches
Halo Effect, 100 x 80 inches
HeMegale Syntaxis
HeMegale Syntaxis, 80 x 120 inches
importance, and consist of descriptions of various kind of Projections, the theory of the musical scale, chronological and metaphysical treatises, and a summary of the hypotheses employed in his great work, the Almagest. Others of Ptolemy’s works have been lost, and it is still a moot point whether or not they contained a treatise on optics, as a Latin version of what is said to have been an Arabic translation of Ptolemy’s original treatise on that subject is still in existence.
Ptolemy, a celebrated astronomer and geographer, whose proper name is Claudius Ptolemaeus, was a native of Egypt, though it is uncertain whether he was born at Pelusium or Ptolemais in the Thebaid. Nothing is known of his personal history, except that he flourished in Alexandria in 139 AD, and there is probable evidence of his having been alive in 161 AD. The chief of his writings are: Megale Syntaxis tes Astronomias, which, to distinguish it from the nextmentioned, was probably denominated by the Arabs megiste, the greatest, from which is derived the name Almagest, by which it is generally known; Tetrabiblos Syntaxis, with which is combined another work, called Karpos or Centiloquium, from it containing a hundred aphorisms, both works treating of astrological subjects and held by some on this account to be of doubtful genuineness; Phaeis aplanon asteron kai synagoge episemaseion, a treatise on the phenomena of the fixed stars, or a species of almanac; Geographike Hyphegesis, his great geographical work, in eight books. The rest of his works are of inferior
The Exponential Calculus, 100 x 80 inches
Companions of Simplicius, 100 x 80 inches
Almacantara, 80 x 100 inches
Liber Abaci, 60 x 50 inches
Undistributed Middle Part I, 46 x 35 inches
Undistributed Middle Part II, 46 x 35 inches
The Lady of the Mountains, 66 x 88 inches
EXHIBITIONS 2012 Art Aspen 2012 Art San Diego 2012 Palm Springs International Art Fair 2012 Art Hamptons 2011 Art San Diego 2011 San Francisco Fine Art Fair 2010 Art Hamptons 2010 Tobi Tobin, Los Angeles 2010 The Edge, Santa Fe 2010 Costello Childs Scottsdale 2010 Budwell Middle East Muscat, Oman 2010 ForrĂŠ and Co. Aspen, CO 2009 Group Exhibition Forre and Co. 2009 Lanoue Fine Art, Boston, MA 2009 Ogilvie Pertl Gallery, Chicago, IL 2009 Madison Gallery, La Jolla, CA 2009 Zane Bennett, Santa Fe, NM 2009 Zane Bennett, Art Chicago 2008 Gallery Moda, Santa Fe, NM 2008-09 Onessimo Fine Art 2008 Ogilvie Pertle Gallery, Chicago, IL 2008 OK H arris Works of Art ,New York, NY 2007 OK Harris Works of Art, New York, NY 2007 Onessimo Fine Art, Palm Beach Gardens, FL 2007 Eleonore Austerer Gallery, Palm Desert, CA 2007 Hernandez Contemporary, Scottsdale, AZ 2007 Ogilvie/Pertl Gallery, Chicago, IL 2007 Gallery Moda, Santa Fe, NM 2006 Lanoue Fine Art, Boston, MA 2006 Modern Masters, Santa Fe, NM 2006 Hernandez Contemporary, Scottsdale, AZ 2006 Modern Masters Fine Art, Palm Desert, CA 2005 Art Chicago Navy Pier, Chicago, IL
2005 2004 2004 2003 2003 2003 2002 2001 2001 2000 1998 1997 1995 1995 1994
Flanders Gallery, Minneapolis, MN Elizabeth Edwards Fine Art, Palm Desert, CA Desert Wolf, Palm Desert, CA Art Chicago, Julie Baker Fine Art, Grass Valley, CA Windsor Gallery, Dania, FL Minnetonka Center for the Arts, Minnetonka, MN Palm Springs International Art Fair, Palm Springs, CA Elizabeth Edwards Fine Art, Maui, HI Elizabeth Edwards Fine Art, Nantucket, MA Palm Springs International Art Fair, Palm Springs, CA Atrium Design Center, Rancho Mirage ,CA Sidney Bechet Center for Visual Arts, Garches, France Gallery Massijiro Ltd., Fukuoka-Ken, Japan Minneapolis Institute of Art, Art in Bloom, Minneapolis, MN Scholes Fine Art, Edina, MN
BIBLIOGRAPHY (References to titles origin) Drive Daniel H Pink A Whole New Mind Daniel H Pink That Used to be Us Thomas L. Friedman and Michael Mandelbaum The Ancient Secret of the Flower of Life: Volume 1 by Drunvalo Melchizedek The Ancient Secret of the Flower of Life: Volume 2 by Drunvalo Melchizedek The Bible Code by Michael Drosnin The Dancing Wu Li Masters by Gary Zukav The Dead Sea Scrolls by G. Vermes
The Divine Proportion by H.E. Huntley Divine Proportion: Phi In Art, Nature, and Science by Priya Hemenway Egyptology: search for the Tomb of Osiris by Candlewick Press The Elegant Universe by Brian Greene The Emerald Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean translation and interpretation by Doreal The Fourth Turning An American Prophecy by William Strauss and Neil Howe God and the New Physics by Paul Davies God is a Verb by David A Cooper The Golden Ratio: The Story of PHI, the World’s Most Astonishing Number by Mario Livio How to Know God by Deepak Chopra The I Ching or Book of Changes by Brian Browne Walker Living in the Heart: How to Enter into the Sacred Space Within the Heart by Drunvalo Melchizedek Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers by Jan Gullberg Morphic Resonance & the Presence of the Past by Rupert Sheldrake Multiple Intelligences by Howard Gardner The Mystery of Aleph by Amir D. Aczel A New Kind of Science by Stephen Wolfram The Power of Intention by Dr. Wayne Dyer The Road to Reality by Roger Penrose Sacred Geometry: Deciphering the Code by Stephen Skinner Sacred Geometry: Philosophy and Practice (Art and Imagination) by Robert Lawlor Sacred Geometry (Wooden Books) by Miranda Lundy The Tao of Physics by Fritjof Capra Wizardology: The Secrets of Merlin by CandlePress (Includes references for painting titles)
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