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Relativity, lithograph, 1953. "Three gravitational forces act perpendicular to each other here. Three Earth surfaces intersect each other at right angles and on each of them people live. Two inhabitants of different worlds cannot walk, sit or stand on the same floor, because their notions of what is horizontal and what is vertical are not the same. But they can use the same staircase together. On the top staircase shown here, two people move next to each other in the same direction. Yet one descends and the other climbs up. Contact between them is impossible, because they live in different worlds and therefore cannot know of each other's existence." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in black and white on poster paper. Paper size : 55 x 65 cm. Image size approx : 43 x 40,5 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Waterfall, lithograph, 1961. "In the same British Journal of Psychology article that inspired Ascending and Descending, R. Penrose published the perspective drawing of a triangle. A copy of which is reproduced here. It is composed of square beams placed at right angles to each other. If we follow all the parts of this construction one by one, no error can be discovered. Yet it is an impossible construct, because there are sudden changes in the interpretation of the distance between our eye and our object. The impossible triangle is applied three times. Falling water sets a mill wheel in motion and then flows slowly in a zigzag manner down a sloping chute between two towers to the point where the waterfall begins again. The miller has to add a bucket of water every now and then to eliminate losses due to evaporation. The two towers are the same height and yet the right one is one floor lower than the left." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in black and white on poster paper. Paper size : 55 x 65 cm. Image size approx : 40 x 50 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Three worlds, lithograph, 1955. "The representation of this forest pond consists of three elements: the autumn leaves that indicate the plane of the water surface, the mirror images of three trees in the background, and the fish in the foreground in the transparent water." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in black and white on poster paper. Paper size : 55 x 65 cm. Image size approx : 40 x 58 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Sky and Water I, woodcut, 1938. "In the horizontal center strip, birds and fish are equal. But we associate flying with the air, so for the black bird the four white fish surrounding it are the air in which it flies. In the same way, swimming reminds us of water, so the four black birds surrounding the fish become for him the water in which he swims." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in black and white on poster paper. Paper size : 55 x 65 cm. Image size : 50 x 50 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Day and Night, woodcut of 2 blocks, 1938. "Gray rectangular fields develop upwards into silhouettes of white and black birds; the black ones fly to the left, the white ones to the right as two oppositely directed formations. On the left, the white ones flow into each other and unite into a daytime sky and landscape. On the right, the black ones merge into night. The day and night landscapes are each other's mirror images, which unite by means of gray fields, from which the birds develop again." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in black and white on poster paper. Paper size: 86,7 x 55 cm. Image size approx 78,5 x 45,5 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Mud puddle, woodcut of 3 blocks, 1952. "The cloudless evening sky is reflected in a mud puddle left in the hollow of a forest road after a rain shower. Traces of two trucks, two bicycles and two pedestrians are imprinted in the marshy ground." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in color on 170gram paper. Paper size : 55 x 65 cm. Image size approx : 49 x 36,2 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Up & Down, lithograph, 1947. "This print shows the same scene twice, but viewed from different points of view. The upper half shows that view for a spectator who is at a height of approximately three floors; the lower half shows the scene that he observes from the ground floor. If he looks upwards from there, he sees the tiled floor on which he is standing, repeated as a ceiling in the center of the composition. But at the very top, this tiled surface is repeated exclusively as a ceiling." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in black and white on poster paper. Paper size : 45 x 79,5 cm. Image size approx : 29,5 x 72,5 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.
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Other World, wood engraving of three blocks, 1947. "The interior of a cube-shaped extension. Openings in the five visible walls offer a view of three different scenes. Through the upper pair one can see the ground, almost vertically downwards; the middle two are at eye level and show the horizon; through the lower pair, one looks steeply up at the stars. Each surface of this structure, which logically unites nadir, horizon and zenith, has a triple function. The rear surface in the center, for example, is a wall in relation to the horizon, a floor in relation to it the upper view and a ceiling with regard to the view of the starry sky." ~ M.C. Escher, Grafiek en Tekeningen. Printed in color on poster paper. Paper size: 55 x 65 cm. Image size approx : 41,5 x 50,5 cm. Packaged in cardboard tube.