

New Amsterdam episode, featuring MoMathīill and Hillary Clinton are fans of MoMath Jeff Bezos takes a ride on square wheels Recognition and Awards.PBS Cyberchase episode, featuring MoMath.Math Discovery, educator-led sessions for students and their families/caregivers from the Museum.MathPlay, the preschool program at MoMath.
Basic math for preschoolers free#
MoMath Online: Student Sessions (pre-K–12), with select classes free.Read about these shapes and hear the stories behind each discovery! Visit /the-hat and /spectre for articles, videos, and even a creative art competition inspired by these discoveries! Ongoing Educational Programs Both are the first-ever shapes that can tile the plane endlessly but only without ever quite repeating the pattern, discovered by math enthusiasts and researchers David Smith, Joseph Samuel Myers, Craig Kaplan, and MoMath’s very own Chaim Goodman-Strauss. Learn about the amazing discovery of the “einstein tile” known as the Hat and its close relative, the Spectre, a “chiral” aperiodic monotile. Groundbreaking Discoveries in Mathematics

Please visit for a listing of all upcoming events and ongoing programs offered at MoMath.Would you like to apply for the MOST program? Join MoMath’s mailing list to hear when the application window opens for Summer 2024. The MOST program works with early career professionals in mathematics who identify as female and helps them strengthen their outreach skills as they share their math expertise in an engaging, easily accessible manner. Please join Hans Noë in conversation with Lawrence Weschler, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, Alva Noë, and others, by registering at .įor early career professionals in mathematics who identify as femaleĬheck out this New York Times article, What Improv Can Do for Mathematicians, highlighting MoMath’s Math Outreach Seminar and Training (MOST) program. Meet the artist! The artist Hans Noë will be making a special guest appearance at MoMath on Tuesday, October 17, at 6:00 pm. Purchase tickets at or become a member at.

Visiting Composite, the gallery at MoMath, is free with Museum general admission or membership. Sculpture: the work of Hans Noë is open to the general public for viewing during MoMath’s open hours, daily from 10 am to 5 pm. MoMath wishes to thank David de Weese for his generosity in sponsoring this show. This show, curated by the veteran arts writer Lawrence Weschler, is the first time he is sharing this work with the public. After retiring, Hans built an exquisite house of his own up north along the Hudson River and started generating a singular collection of sculptures and maquettes. Though he had some success thereafter building homes for artists in the Hamptons during the fifties and early sixties, the deeply ingrained habit of never calling attention to himself worked somewhat against his success as an architect. After many harrowing years of subterfuge and hiding, often in plain sight, he arrived in NYC where he became a protégé of and assistant to Tony Smith, the eminent sculptor and architect. Hans was born in 1928 in Czernowitz, a town of 250,000 in Eastern Europe which saw most of its population of 140,000 Jews perish. Over the past several decades, he has been compiling a remarkable body of mathematically flecked, geometrically confounding sculptural work in virtually complete secret. Hans Noë is a 95-year-old Holocaust survivor who may not be so much a hidden master as a hiding one. On temporary exhibition Sculpture: the work of Hans Noë
