art.wikisort.org - SculptureIsaac Newton Gargoyle is an outdoor 1988–1989 hammered copper sheet relief depicting Isaac Newton by Wayne Chabre, installed on the exterior of Willamette Hall on the University of Oregon campus, in Eugene, Oregon. The sculpture is part of the collection of the Oregon Arts Commission,[1] and administered by the University of Oregon.[2] It was surveyed by the Smithsonian Institution's "Save Outdoor Sculpture!" program in 1994.[2]
The piece is one of a series by Chabre at the Eugene campus that includes scientists and mathematicians Albert Einstein (Einstein Gargoyle, 1986), Marie Curie (Marie Curie Gargoyle, 1989), James Clerk Maxwell (Maxwell & Demon Gargoyle, 1989), Alan Turing (Alan Turing, 1988), John von Neumann (John von Neumann, 1987), and Thomas Condon; a fruit fly (Drosophila Fly Head, 1988); and a school of zebrafish.[3]
References
Oregon portal
Visual arts portal
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Key:  No longer extant or on public display |
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Publications |
- Fluxions (1671)
- De Motu (1684)
- Principia (1687; writing)
- Opticks (1704)
- Queries (1704)
- Arithmetica (1707)
- De Analysi (1711)
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Other writings |
- Quaestiones (1661–1665)
- "standing on the shoulders of giants" (1675)
- Notes on the Jewish Temple (c. 1680)
- "General Scholium" (1713; "hypotheses non fingo" )
- Ancient Kingdoms Amended (1728)
- Corruptions of Scripture (1754)
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Contributions |
- Calculus
- Impact depth
- Inertia
- Newton disc
- Newton polygon
- Newton's reflector
- Newtonian telescope
- Newton scale
- Newton's metal
- Spectrum
- Structural coloration
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Newtonianism |
- Bucket argument
- Newton's inequalities
- Newton's law of cooling
- Newton's law of universal gravitation
- post-Newtonian expansion
- parameterized
- gravitational constant
- Newton–Cartan theory
- Schrödinger–Newton equation
- Newton's laws of motion
- Newtonian dynamics
- Newton's method in optimization
- Apollonius's problem
- truncated Newton method
- Gauss–Newton algorithm
- Newton's rings
- Newton's theorem about ovals
- Newton–Pepys problem
- Newtonian potential
- Newtonian fluid
- Classical mechanics
- Corpuscular theory of light
- Leibniz–Newton calculus controversy
- Newton's notation
- Rotating spheres
- Newton's cannonball
- Newton–Cotes formulas
- Newton's method
- generalized Gauss–Newton method
- Newton fractal
- Newton's identities
- Newton polynomial
- Newton's theorem of revolving orbits
- Newton–Euler equations
- Newton number
- Newton's quotient
- Parallelogram of force
- Newton–Puiseux theorem
- Absolute space and time
- Luminiferous aether
- Newtonian series
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Personal life |
- Woolsthorpe Manor (birthplace)
- Cranbury Park (home)
- Early life
- Later life
- Religious views
- Occult studies
- Scientific Revolution
- Copernican Revolution
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Relations |
- Catherine Barton (niece)
- John Conduitt (nephew-in-law)
- Isaac Barrow (professor)
- William Clarke (mentor)
- Benjamin Pulleyn (tutor)
- John Keill (disciple)
- William Stukeley (friend)
- William Jones (friend)
- Abraham de Moivre (friend)
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Depictions | |
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Namesake | |
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Categories | |
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