Part IV
The beauty of ideal knots
Let me change the
mood.
From the gloomy one to
more optimistic.
Untangling knots is neither
easy nor safe, but the result - ideal knots - are worth the risk: they
are pretty!
Some artists knew this
before the scientists started to think about them.
There are many wonderful
examples of ideal knots depicted in the most precious pieces of
art.
Being Polish, I went through
the art galleries trying to find ideal knots in pictures painted
by Polish artists, in
particular those, whom I like most: Wyspianski, Axentowicz, Zmurko.
I think I have found some
interesting pieces.
Let me start with Zmurko.
He is less known, but as I find, his knowledge of ideal knots was deep.
One of his paintings can
be seen as a proof of the existence of ideal knots. I like the proof.
In contrast to the proof
by Cantarella, Kusner and Sullivan, Zmurko's proof is full of warmth
and feelings.
(CKS, sorry, but this
is true.)
A cigarette, a
fan and an ideal trefoil
(based on: A fan and
a cigarette by Franciszek
Zmurko)
It seems that many Polish artists
who spent some time in Paris were aware of the existence of ideal knots.
Certainly, Wyspianski knew they existed.
More. He was apparently aware that the path leading to the ideal
conformation could be blocked by the misleadingly
beautiful, local minima.
Looking at his Girl with a knot
you will certainly recognize the Gordian Unknot.
Neither I, nor anybody else was able to
provide a formal proof of its existence.
Wyspianski's approach is different: "The
proof of the pudding is in eating".
He simply portrayed it.
Girl with the Gordian
Unknot
(based on: Girl with
a flowerpot by Stanislaw
Wyspianski)
As we are with Wyspianski,
my favorite painter, let me tell you something more about him.
His intuitive knowledge
of the knot theory must have been a good one.
In one of his paintings,
we find a clear image of a nicely tightened, big achiral knot.
Girl with an achiral
knot
(based on: Girl
in a hat by Stanislaw Wyspianski)
In another, I recognize a toy in form of a cable knot.
Sleeping Mietek
with a cable knot
(based on: Sleeping
Mietek by Stanislaw Wyspianski)
To end with something
special, let me introduce to you another remarkable Polish painter,
Jozef Mehoffer.
In Friburg, Switzerland,
you may find his wonderful stained glass pictures. Here, I would like
to make you
acquainted with one of
the most unusual piece of his work, a dream-like picture of a garden.
It would be strange, if
there were no ideal knots in it. There are two, both trefoils.