M. C. Escher. The Graphic Work - Taschen - 2009 (1989) PDF
M. C. Escher. The Graphic Work - Taschen - 2009 (1989) PDF
M. C. Escher. The Graphic Work - Taschen - 2009 (1989) PDF
ES C H E R
The Graphic Work
TASCH EN
HONG KONG KOLN LONDON LOS ANGELES MADRI D PAR IS TOKYO
FRONT COVER:
Sky and water I, 1938
Woodcut, 44 x 44 em
BACK COVER:
M. C. Escher
Photo: Bruno Ernst
ISBN: 978-1-4351-1858-4
13579108642
Contents
Introduction 5
Classif ication and Description 7
5
I ha ve never practised any other type of intaglio. From the
moment of my discovery, I have deliberately left etching
and copper-plate engraving to one side. The reason for
this can probably be traced to the fact that I find it
preferable to delineate my figures by means of tone-
contrast, rather than by linear contour. The thin black line
on a white background, which is characteristic of etching
and copper-engraving, would only be of use as a compo-
nent part of a shaded area, but it is not adequate for this
purpose. Moreover, with intaglio, one is much more tied to
white as a starting point than is the case with raised relief
and planography. The drawing of a narrow wh ite line on
a dark surface, for w hich raised relief methods are
eminently suitable, is practically impossible w ith intaglio,
while on the other hand, a thin black line on a white
background can be satisfactorily achieved, albeit as a
rather painstaking operation, in woodcuts and wood-
.....
Regular division of a plane with two congruent motifs
engravi ngs.
6
Classification and description
of the numbered reproductions
11. Day and night, woodcut pri nted from two blocks,
1938, 39 x 68 em
Grey rectangu lar fields develo p upwards into si lhouettes
of white and b lack birds; the black ones a re flying towards
the left and the white ones towards the right, in two
o p posing formatio ns. To the left of the picture the white
birds flow together and merge to form a daylight sky and
Symmetry drawing C landscape. To the rig ht the black birds melt together into
night . The day and night landscapes are mirror images of
8
each other, united by means of the grey fields out of which, d. Infinity of number 18-27
once aga in, the birds emerge.
If all component ports are equal in size, it is impossible to
12. Sun and moon, woodcut printed from fo ur blocks, represent more tha n a fragment of a regular p lane-fi lling.
1948, 25 x 27.5 em If o ne wishes to illustrate on infinite number then one must
The subject of this coloured woodcut is once again the have recourse to a g radual red uction in the size of th e
contrast between day and night. But in this instance the figures, until one reaches- at any rote theoretically- the
two notions ore not, as in print 11, pictured as next to each limit of infinite small ness.
other but in the some place - tho ugh not simultaneous,
being sepa rated by a leap of the mind. It is day-time when 18. Sphere surface with fishes, woodcut printed from
there is a sun shining in the centre, w here the sun is two blocks, 1958, diameter 32 em
shooting out yellow and red rays. Aga inst this background The previous print demonstrated a return motion towards
stand out fourteen dark blue birds. As soon as one divests the starting point. There now follow va riations on that
them of their function as objects and regards them as theme, with two cores, a starting point and an end point
background, then there appear fourteen light coloured between which the chains of figures move. Here, as a first
bi rd s against a night sky, w ith a crescent moon in the centre example, is a sphere with two poles and a network of
and with stars, planets and a comet. longitudinal and latitudinal circles. Swimming spirally
outwards from the one visible pole, there come alternate
13. Sky and water I, woodcut, 1938, 44 x 44 em rows of white and black fishes. They attain their greatest
In the horizontal central strip there are birds and fish size on reaching the equator and thereafter they become
equivalent to each other. We associate flying with sky, and smaller and disap pear into the other, invisible, po le on the
so for each of the block birds the sky in w hich it is fly ing is for side of the sphe re.
formed by the four white fish which encircle it. Similarly
swimming makes us think of water, and therefore the four 19. Path of life II, woodcut printed from two blocks,
black b irds that surround a fish become th e water in which 1958, 37 x 37 em
it swims. Here, too, thepointof infinitesmallnessisinthecentre. This
time an attempt has been made to e li minate the
14. Sky and water II, woodcut, 1938, 62 x40 .5 em unsatisfactory fea tu re of an illogical limit. The area is filled
Similar in subjecttothatin no. 13 (Sky and Water 1), except with white and grey fish-shaped figures whose
that the bi rds and fishes are to be seen here in direct as well longitudinal axes ore accentuated by black lines. Out
as in mirror image. from the central point come fou r series of white fish {rays)
swimming head to tail in a spi ral motion. The four largest
c. Development of form and contrast 15-16-17 specimens, which close off the square surface, change
direction a nd colour; th eir wh ite tails still belong to th e
15. Liberation, lithograph, 1955, 43.5 x 20 em centrifugal movement, but their grey heads ore a lready
On the uniformly grey surface of a strip of paper that is tu rni ng inwards and so form part of the grey series which
being un ro lled, a simultaneous development in form and ore moving back towards the centre.
contrast is taking place. Triangles, at first scarcely visible,
change into more comp licated figures, whilst the colour 20. Smaller and smaller, wood-engraving printed from
contrast b etween them increases. In the midd le they are four blocks, 1956, 38 x 38 em
transformed into white and black b irds, and from there fl y The area of each of the reptil e-shaped e lements of this
off into the world as independe nt creatures. And so the pattern is regu la rly and contin uously halved in the direc-
strip of paper on which they were drawn disappears. tion of the centre, where theoretically both infinite
smallness of size and infinite greatness of number are
16. Development I, woodcut, 1937, 44 x 44 em reached. However, in practice, the wood-engraver soon
Scarcely visible g rey squares at the edges evolve in form comes to the end of hi s abi lity to carry on. He is depend ent
and contrast towards the centre. Their g rowth is on foudactors: 1. the qua lity of his wood-block, 2. the
completed in the middle. An unsatisfactory feature of th is sharpness of the instrument that he is using, 3. the
kind of inward -directed unfolding is that there is so little steadiness of his hand and , 4. his optical ability (good
space left for th.e freedom of movement of the most eyesight, plenty of light and a powerful magnifying lens).
greatly developed figures: two white and two black In this particular case, the halving of the figures is ca rried
reptil es. thro ug h ad absurdum . The smallest animal still possessing
a head, a ta il and four legs is about 2 mil limetres in le ngth.
17. Verbum, lithograph, 1942, 33 x 38.5 em From the point of view of composition, this work is only
An evolution working from the centre outwards, thus the partially satisfactory. In spite of the central li mit, it remains
opposite way round to the previous print, offe rs more only a fragment, b ecause the outer edge of the pattern
space a t the edges for the fully grown figures. The central has been arbitrarily fixed. So a complete composition has
word "Verbum" recalls the biblical story of creation. Out not been achieved.
of a misty grey th e re loom triangular primeval figures
which, by the time they reach the edges of the hexagon, 21. Whirlpools, wood-engraving printed from
have developed into birds, fishes and frogs, each in its own two blocks, 1957, 45 x 23.5 em
e le ment: air, water and e arth. Each kind is pictured by day Closely related to the foregoing picture, there is here
and by night, and the creatures merge into each other as displayed a flat surface with two visible cores. These are
they move forwa rd along the outline of the hexagon, in a bound together by two white S-shaped spirals, drawn
clockwise direction. through the bodily axes of, once again, fish swimm ing
9
head to tail. But in this case they move forward in opposite radiate from it. The disc is d ivided into six sections in which,
directions. The upper core is the starting point for the dark- turn and turn about, the angels on a black background
colo ured series, the component members of which attain and then the devils on a wh ite one, gain the upper hand.
their greatest size in the middle of the picture. From then In this way, heaven and hell change place six times. In the
on, they come within the sphere of influence of the lower intermediate, "earthly" stages, they are equivalent.
core, towards w hich they keep on swirling until they disap-
pear within it. The other, light-coloured, line makes the 26. Fishes and scales, woodcut, 1959, 38 x 38 em
same sort of journey but in the opposite direction. As a The final example in this group brings in two different sorts
matter of special printing technique, I would point out that of mutation, carried out at one and the same time, that is
only one wood-block is used for both colours, these to say both shape and size. Th e double process completes
having been printed one after the other on the same sheet itself twice over. In the upper part of th e print, from right
of paper, and turned 180 degrees in reflection to each to left, scales grow into fish that keep on increasing in size.
other. The two prints fill up each other's open spaces. In the lower half the same thing happens, but from left to
right .
22. Circle limit I, woodcut, 1958, diameter 42 em
Sofarfourexamples have been shown with pointsas limits 27. Butterflies, wood-engraving, 1950, 28 x 26 em
of infinite smallness. A diminution in the size of the figures Working downwards from the top to the centre, th e w hite
progressing in the opposite direction, i.e. from within area is divided up by black contours of increasing
outwards, leads to more satisfying results. The limit is no thickness which take on ever larger butterfly shapes; these
longer a point, but a line which bordersthewholecomplex continue to develop.
and gives it a logical boundary. In this way one creates, as
it were, a universe, a geometrical enclosure. If the e . Story pictures 28-33
progressive reduction in size radiates in all directions a t an
equal rate, then the limit becomes a circle. In the example Th e chief characteristic of the six foll owi ng prints is the
in qu~stion (chronologically the first of the three which transition from flat to spatial and vice versa. We think in
have been included in this book), the arrangement of the terms of an interplay between the stiff, crystallized two-
component parts still leaves much to be desired. All the dimensional figures of a reg ular pattern and the indivi-
lines, once again accentuated by the bodily axes, consist dual freedom of three-dimensional creatures capable of
of alternating pairs of fish, two white ones head to head moving about in space witho ut hindrance. On the one
and two black ones whose tails touch. So there is no hand, the members of planes of collectivity come to life in
continuity here, no direction offorward movement, nor is space; on the other, the free individ uals sink back and lose
there any unity of colour in each line. themselves in the com munity. A row of identical spatial
beings such as those to be found in the prints of this group
23. Square limit, woodcut printed from two blocks, often emerges to be treated as a single individual in
1964, 34 x 34 em motion. This is a static method of illustrating a dynamic
Design number 20 {Smaller and smaller) showed a fact. A few prints from each group, such as 11 {Day and
pattern composed of elements continuously reduced by night), 15 {Liberation) a nd 17 {Verbum) might also be
half as they move in the direction of the centre. A similar counted in this category, were it not for the fact that their
system of halving was adapted here, but this time moving chief characteristic differs from that of the ones we have
from with in outwards. The limit of the infinitely smal l just been considering.
shapes is reached on the straight sides of the square.
28. Reptiles, lithograph, 1943, 33.5 x 38.5 em
24. Circle limit Ill, woodcut printed from five blocks, The life cycle of a little alligator. A mid all kinds of objects,
1959, diameter 41.5 em a drawing book lies open, a nd the drawing on view is a
Here, the failings of the previous work are as far as mosaic of reptilian figures in three contrasting shades.
possible remedied. White cu r ved lines cut across each Evidently one of them has tired of lying flat and rigid
other and div ide one another into sections, each of which amongst his fellows, so he puts one plastic-looking leg
equals the length of a fi sh. They mark the routes along over th e edge of the book, wrenches himself free and
which series offish move forward, from the infinitely small, launches out into rea !life. He climbs up the back of a book
through the greatest size, to infinitely small. Each series on zoology and works his laborious way up the slippery
comprises fish of only one colour. It is necessary to have at slope of a set square to the highest point of his existence.
least four colours so as to get the lines of fish to contrast Then after a quick snort, tired but fulfilled, he goes
with each other. It is worth mentioning, from the point of downhill again, via on ashtray, to the level surface, to that
view of printing technique, that five wood-blocks were flat drawing paper, and meekly rejoins his erstwhile
made, oneforthe black lines and fourfor thecolours. Each friends, ta king up once more his function as an element of
block has the shape of a right-ang led segment and so has surface division.
to be printed four times over in order to fill the circle.
Therefore a complete copy of this print requires 4x 5 = 20 N .B. The little book of Job has nothing to do with the Bible,
impressions. but contains Belgian cigarette papers.
25. Circle limit iv, {Heaven a nd Hell), woodcut printed 29. Cycle, lithograph, 1938, 47.5 x 28 em
from two blocks,1960, diameter 41.5 em At the top right-hand corner a jolly young lad comes
Here, too, we have the components dimi nishing in size as popping out of his house. As he rus hes downstairs he loses
they move outwards. The six largest (three white angels his special quality and takes his place in a pattern of flat,
and three black devils) are arranged about the centre a nd grey, white and black fellow-shapes. Towards the left and
10
upwards these become simplified into lozenges. The quickly turn once more into black bird shapes. Small grey
dimension of depth is achieved by the combination of birds begin to appear in the white background and then
three diamonds which give the impression of a cube. The gain in size until their contours equal those of their fellows.
cube is joined on to the house from which the boy emerges. Such areas of white that still remain take on the form of a
The floor of a terrace is laid with the same familiar pattern third variety of bird so that there are now three different
of diamond-shaped tiles. The hilly landscape at the top is kinds, each with its own specific form and colour, filling the
intended to display the utmost three-dimensional realism, surface completely. Now for another simplification: each
while the periodic pattern at the lower part of the picture b ird turns into a lozenge. Just as in print number 29
shows the greatest possible amount of two-dimensional (CycleL this is an opportunity to pass over to the three-
restriction of freedom. dimensional, as three diamond shapes suggest a cube.
The blocks give rise to a c ity on the sea-shore. The tower
30. Encounter, lithograph, 1944, 34 x 46.5 em standing in the water is at the sometime a piece in a game
Out from the grey surface of a back wall there develops a of chess; the board for this game, with its light and dark
complicated pattern of white and black figures of little squares, leads back once more to the letters of the word
men. And since men who d esire to live need at least a floor "Metamorphose".
to wa lk on, a fl oor has been designed for them, with a
circ ul ar gap in the middle so that as much as possible can 33. Predestination, lithograph, 1951 , 29 x 42 em
still be seen of the back wal l. In this way they are forced, An aggressive, voracious fish and a shy and vulnerable
notonlytowalkin a ring , but a Isoto meet each other in the bird are the actors in this drama: such co ntrasting traits of
foreground: a white optimist and a black pessi mist character lead inevitably to the d e nouement. A regular
shaking hands with one another. pattern floats like a ribbon in space. Lower down, in the
middle, this picture strip is made up of fish and birds, but
31. Magic mirror, lithograph, 1946, 28 x 44.5 em by a substitution of figures, only birds remain on the left
On a tiled floor there stands a vertical reflecting screen out side and fish on the right. Out from these gradually fading
of which a fabulous animal is born. Bit by bit it emerges, extremities, one representative of each sort breaks loose
until a complete beast walks away to the right. His mirror - a black, devilish fish and a white bird, all innocence, but
image setsofftowards the left, but he seems fairly substan- sad to say irrevocably doomed to destruction. The fate of
tial, for behind the reflecting screen he appears in quite a each is played out in the foreground.
realistic guise. First of all they walk in a row, then two by
two, and finally both streams meet up four abreast. At the f. Irregular filling of plane surfaces 34-35
same time they lose their plasticity. Like pieces of a ji9saw
puzzle they slide into one anoth e r, fill up each other' s The next two prints consist offigures that do not in anyway
interstices and fade into the floor on which the mirror repeat themselves in similar form . So they do not really
stands. belong to group II; nevertheless they were added to it
because they do in fact have their surfaces filled up, with
32. Metamorphose, woodcut printed from twenty-nine no spaces left empty.
blocks, 1939-40 and 1967-68, 19.5 x 700 em
A long series of changing shapes. Out of the word What is more, they could never have been produced
"Metamorphose" placed vertically and horizontally o n without years of training in reg ular surface-filling . The
th.e level su rface, with the letters 0 and M ( = Greek E) as recognizability of their components as natural objects
points of intersection, there emerges a mosaic of white plays a more important role. The only reason for their
and black squares that changes into a carpet of flowers exist ence is one's enjoyment of th is difficult game, without
and leaves on which two bees have settled. The reupo n the any ulterior motive.
flowers and leaves change back into squares aga in, only
to be transformed once more, this time into animal shapes. 34. Mosaic I, mezzotint, 1951, 14.5 x 20 em
To use musical term inology, we are dealing here with four- Regularity of construction can be recognized in this
four time. rectangular mosaic in that, both as regards height and
breadth, three light and three dark figures alternate li ke
Now the rhyth m changes; a third shade is added to the the squares on a chessboard. With the exception of the
w hite and black and the measure changes to three-four shapes round the edge, every white one is surrounded by
time. Each figure becomes simplified and the pattern four black ones and every black by four white. The sum
which at first was composed of squ ares now consists of total can immediately be ascertained: 36 pieces, 18 white
hexagons. Then fol lows an association of ideas; hexagons and 18 black.
makeone think ofthecellsin a honeycomb, and so in every
cell there appears a bee larva . The full y grown larvae tu rn 35. Mosaic II, lithograph, 1957, 32 x 37 em
into bees w hich fly off into space. But they are not In this case the only regularity to be noted is the
vo uchsafed o long life of freedom, for soon their black rectangularity of the complete surface. There are but few
silhouettes join together to form a background for white of the inner figures bordered by four adjacent ones. The
fish. As these also fuse together, the interstices see m to direct environment of the frog consists of two figures; the
take on the form of b lock birds. Similar transformations of guitar is hemmed in by three, the cock by five and the
background objects now appear several times: dark ostrich (if that is what it really is) by six. The sum total can
birds... light-coloured boots ... dark fish ... light horses ... only be arrived at by careful counting.
dark birds. These become simplified into a pattern of
equilateral tria ngles which serve for a short whi le as a
canvas on which winged letters are depicted but then
11
Ill. Unlimited spaces 36-37-38 casing which, as a narrowing torus, returns to the place
where it began, penetrates within itself and starts on its
36. Depth, wood-engraving printed from three second round.
blocks,1955, 32 x 23 em
Here, too, space is divided up cubically. Each fish is found 43. Sphere spirals, woodcut printed from four blocks,
at the intersection of three lines of fish , all of which cross 1958, diameter 32cm
each other at right-angles. Here, just as in no. 18, a sphere is shown with a network of
longitudinal and latitudinal circles. Four spirals twist their
37. Cubic space division, lithograph, 1952, way around the spherical surface, infini tely small at the
27 x 26.5 em poles and broadest at the equator. Half of its yellow
Intersecting each other at right angles, girders d ivide exterior is visible. Through open la nes in its side the red
each other into equal lengths, each forming the edge of a interior can be followed to the opposite pole.
cube. In this way space is filled to infinity with cubes of the
same size. 44. Moebius band I, wood-engraving printed from four
blocks, 1961 , 24 x 26 em
38. Three intersecting planes, woodcut printed from An endless band has been cut through, down its whole
two blocks, 1954, 32.5 x 37.5 em length. The two sections have been drawn apart from
Three planes intersect each other at rightangles. They are each other a little, sothata clear space divides them all the
indicated by squa re tiles with the same number of squa re way round. Thus the band ought to fall apart into two
gaps between them. Each plane recedes in perspective to unattached rings, and yet apparently it consists of one
a vanishing point and the three vanishing points coincide single strip, made up of three fish, each biting the tai l of the
with the points of an equilateral triangle. one in front. They go round twice before regaining their
point of departure.
16
1.
Tower of Bobel
2.
Castrovalva
3.
Palm
4.
G. A. Escher
5.
Fluorescent sea
6.
St. Peter, Rome
7.
Dream
8.
Swans
9.
Horsemen
10.
Two intersecting planes
11.
Day and night
12 .
Sun and moon
13.
Sky a nd water I
14.
Sky ond woter II
15 .
Liberation
16.
Development I
17.
Verbum
18.
Sphere surface with fishes
19.
Path of life II
20.
Smaller and smaller
21.
Whirlpools
?..2.
Circle \imil I
23.
Squa re limit
2.A.
Circle \iroil Ill
25.
Circle limit IV
26.
Fishes and scales
27.
Butterflies
28.
Reptiles
29.
Cycle
30.
Encounter
3 1.
Magic mirror
32.
Metamorphose
33.
Predestination
34.
Mosaic I
35.
Mosaic II
36.
Depth
37.
Cubic space division
38.
Three intersecting planes
39 .
Knots
40
M~ebius bo nd II
4 1.
Concentric rinds
42.
Spirals
43 .
Sphere spirals
44.
Moebius bond I
45.
Rind
46.
Bond of union
/
47.
Rippled surface
48.
Puddle
49.
Three worlds
50.
Still life with reflecting globe
51.
Hand with reflecting globe
52.
Three spheres II
53 .
Dewdrop
54.
Eye
55.
Cube with magic ribbons
56.
Concave and convex
57.
Double planetoid
58.
Tetra hedral planetoid
59.
Order and chaos
60.
Gravitation
61.
Stars
62.
Flat worms
63.
Another world II
64.
High and low
:De Pedalternorotani:'iomovens eentroeu1a.tu.s a-rHculosllS ontstonCI,(generatlos,P.Onta.neat)
uit onbevredigdheid over bet in denatuur ontbre'kenvan wielvormLgeJevenae sene~e:
len met net vermos-en zicllrollena_VOO!'t te bewegen.}{et nier'bjj a.fgebeelae di.ertj~' Ltl ae
volksmond genaa.m~ 11Wente1teefje"of,,rolpens~ trc1cht dus in etln diepgevoeloe be:
hoefte teVQOrZten.Bio1ogisc1le 'DUzonaerneden :zyn nog sena.a.rs :i.sbet een
zoogoier,eell repUel,of een Lnsel<t? Het neeft een 1angger-ekt uit ver= 1
noor.nd.e _gel~d l~~en ~~vorma licnaam en dri~ paren poten,waarvan
de uttemden geJukems vertonen met aemenseJy'Ke voet. Iq net midden
en van de oLKke,ronde kop,die voorz~n ts vane en ste-rk g~bo~
daaT>:. -sen papa~aatensnavel,"bevtnoen :dell ae bolvormige
toe een ogen,die,op atelen ?eplaa:tst ,ter weerszyden van
betrekkel9k de 1<oP. ver uitsLeKen.In ~estrel<te poslt ie l<an
vlal<l<e baan net di.er- zteh~tN:ag en bedaclltzaa.m ,door
tot z~nbescnik mLadel van zijn zes_poten~voortbewegen
"king Me{t,aru'kt het over et>n wlllel<eurl.g substraat
zijn koQ op de grond ~n {het ka.n eventueel steile tra.pp~n
rolt ztch o1Cksemsnel opldi.mmen of afdalen ,dOO'P
op,wa~rbU net zlcb afduwt str-u.tkgewas neendrtngen
met zun pot en ~oor zoveel aeze of ove-r rots blokken
da.n nog desrond raken,In O.P-~ l<laut ereJl). Zo=
gerolde toestand vertoont net dra. net echtep
de gedaante van een dlscus-senyf, eenlange
waarvan decentpaie as gevor>mo worat wegmoet
door de ogen-op-stelen.Door zien beurle-:. afleg:
lings ~f te zetten met een van zijn dpie paren ~en
65.
Curl-up
66. .
House of stairs
67.
Rela tivity
68.
Three spheres I
69.
Drawing hands
70.
Balcony
71.
Doric columns
72.
Print gallery
73_
Dragon
74.
Belvedere
75.
Ascending and descending
76.
Waterfall
..
BG -Art/Photo/Arch
I S BN 978 - 1 - 4 3 51 - 18 5 8 -4