A plane is called homogeneous iff all the plane points are translationaly equivalent, and isotropic iff all directions containing some fixed point of the plane are equivalent. The symmetry group of the homogeneous and isotropic plane E2 is the maximal continuous symmetry group of ornaments p00¥m (s ¥¥). The continua with the symmetry group p00mm (s¥¥) can be understood as the result of the multiplication of a point or circle - a rosette with the continuous symmetry group D¥ (¥m) - by means of the continuous symmetry group of translations p00. A plane continuum with the symmetry group p00¥m ( s¥¥) represents the area where all the other plane symmetry groups exist. Apart from this continuous symmetry group of ornaments, also visually presentable are the symmetry groups of semicontinua p101m (s1m) and p10mm (smm). They are derived, respectively, as the extensions of the visually presentable continuous symmetry groups of friezes m01 and m0m (Figure 2.29) by a translation perpendicular to the frieze axis. In ornamental art, the symmetry groups of semicontinua usually are presented by adequate systems of parallel lines, constructed by such a procedure. The other continuous symmetry groups of ornaments may be visually interpreted by using textures (A.V. Shubnikov, N.V. Belov et al., 1964).
From the common point of view of geometry and ornamental art, the most interesting are the crystallographic discrete symmetry groups of ornaments. The idea to analyze the ornaments of different cultures by applying the theory of symmetry and by registering the symmetry groups of ornaments, developed by G. Pòlya (1924), has been abundantly used by A. Speiser (1927), E. Müller (1944), A.O. Shepard (1948), H. Weyl (1952), J. Garrido (1952), N.V. Belov (1956a), L. Fejes Tòth (1964), D.W. Crowe (1971, 1975), A.V. Shubnikov and V.A. Koptsik (1974), D.K. Washburn (1977), E. Makovicky and M. Makovicky (1977), B. Grünbaum (1984b), I. Hargittai and G. Lengyel (1985), D.W. Crowe and D.K. Washburn (1988) and by many other authors. The quoted works mainly analyze the appearance of 17 discrete symmetry groups of ornaments in the art of the ancient cultures (Egypt, China, etc.), in Moorish ornamental art or in ethnical art. How difficult it is to exhaust all the symmetry possibilities for plane ornaments and to discover all the symmetry groups of ornaments, is illustrated by the fact that many nations, even those with a rich ornamental tradition, in their early art do not have such examples (B. Grünbaum, 1984b; B. Grünbaum, Z. Grünbaum, G.C. Shephard, 1986).
In the mathematical theory of symmetry, the first complete list of the discrete symmetry groups of ornaments was given by E.S. Fedorov (1891b), although this problem was, even before that, the subject of study of many important mathematicians.
Therefore, the fact that examples of most of the discrete symmetry groups of ornaments, given in bone and stone engravings or drawings, date from the Paleolithic ornamental art is very surprising. In the Neolithic there came the further development of ornamental art, mainly related to the decoration of ceramics. Neolithic ornamental art is characterized by paraphrasing, variation, enrichment of already existent ornaments and by the discovery of those symmetry groups of ornaments which remained undiscovered.
Ornaments with the symmetry group p1 (Figure 2.58, 2.59) for the first time occur in Paleolithic art (Figure 2.58a, b). The origin of these ornaments, obtained by multiplying an asymmetric figure by means of a discrete group of translations, may be interpreted also as a translational repetition of a frieze with the symmetry group 11, already existent in Paleolithic ornamental art. Both of the axes of generating translations are polar. Since the symmetry group p1 does not contain indirect isometries, the enantiomorphism occurs. A fundamental region usually has an arbitrary parallelogramic form. Due to their low degree of symmetry, ornaments with the symmetry group p1 are relatively rare. Mostly, they occur with stylized asymmetric motifs inspired by asymmetric models in nature, rather than by using asymmetric geometric figures.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p1 in Paleolithic and Neolithic art: (a) Chaffaud cave, Paleolithic (Magdalenian); (b) Paleolithic bone engravings, around 10000 B.C.; (c) Hacilar, ceramics, around 5700-5000 B.C. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p1: (a) Hacilar, around 5700-5000 B.C.; (b) Velushko-Porodin, Yugoslavia, around 5000 B.C.; (c) Western Pakistan, around 3000 B.C.; (d) Naqda culture, Egypt, around 3600-3200 B.C.; (e) the pre-dynastic period of Egypt; (f) art of pre-Columbian America, Nasca, Peru; (g) the ornament "Warms", the ethnical art of Africa. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group p2 (Figure 2.60-2.63) also date from the Paleolithic, occurring in their most elementary form - as a lattice of parallelograms (Figure 2.60b). Already in the late Paleolithic (the Magdalenian), there are different ornaments with the symmetry group p2. Some of them are very rich, as, for example, the meander motif from Ukraine, dating to the XI millennium B.C. Despite some deviations from the exact symmetry of ornaments, this record of Paleolithic ornamental art is of an unexpected scope (Figure 2.60a). In Neolithic ornamental art, besides the meander motifs, very popular were motifs based on the double spiral - rosette with the symmetry group C2 (2) - occurring for the first time in the Paleolithic (Figure 2.60c). It is probable that, the double spiral can be found in ornamental art of all the Neolithic cultures, often with wave motifs. Layered patterns (B. Grünbaum, G.C. Shephard, 1987) with the symmetry group p2 (Figure 2.62a) originating from the Paleolithic, are frequent (Figure 2.60b). Since a central reflection is the element of the symmetry group p2, in the corresponding ornaments both the generating translation axes will be bipolar. Therefore, in a visual sense, such ornaments produce an impression of two-way motion. Enantiomorphic modifications exist. Since in nature the symmetry group C2 (2) occurs relatively seldom, ornaments with the symmetry group p2 mostly are geometric ones. The simplest construction of ornaments with the symmetry group p2, probably used in Paleolithic ornamental art, is a multiplication of a frieze with the symmetry group 12 by a non-parallel translation. A fundamental region is often triangular and offers the use of curvilinear boundaries.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p2 in Paleolithic art, around 12000-10000 B.C.: (a) Mezin, USSR; (b) the Paleolithic of Western Europe; (c) the motif of the double spiral, Mal'ta, USSR; (d) the application of the motif of the double spiral, Arudy, Isturiz; (e) the Paleolithic art of Europe. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p2 in Neolithic art: (a) Tepe Guran, around 5800 B.C.; (b) Siyalk II, around 4000 B.C.; (c) Samara, around 5500 B.C.; (d) Catal Hüjük, around 6400-5800 B.C.; (e) the Neolithic of the Middle East; (f) the Neolithic of Iran and Egypt; (g) Neolithic of the Middle East; (h) Dimini, Greece, around 6000 B.C.; (i) Neolithic, Czechoslovakia, around 5000-4000 B.C.; (j) Odzaki, Greece, around 6100-5800 B.C. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p2 in Neolithic art: (a) Butmir II, Yugoslavia, around 3000 B.C.; (b) Adriatic zone, around 3000-2000 B.C.; (c) Starchevo, Yugoslavia, around 5000 B.C.; (d) Danilo, Yugoslavia, around 4000 B.C.; (e) Vincha II, Yugoslavia, around 4500-4000 B.C.; (f) Adriatic zone, around 3000-2000 B.C.; (g) Lendel culture, Hungary, around 2900 B.C.; (h) Neolithic, Italy, around 3700-2700 B.C. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group p2 in ornamental art: (a) application of a double spiral, rosette C2 (2) in the ornaments of the Aegean cultures and Egypt; (b) Knossos; (c) the art of the pre-Columbian period, Peru; (d) the art of the Pueblo Indians; (e) the ethnical art, Indonesia. |
In the same way, a construction of ornaments with the symmetry groups pm, pg, pmg and pmm can be interpreted as a multiplication of the corresponding friezes by means of a translation perpendicular to the frieze axis. All the afore mentioned symmetry groups of friezes originated from Paleolithic ornamental art.
From the Paleolithic onward, ornaments with the symmetry group pm (Figure 2.64-2.67) are frequently used in ornamental art, as "geometric", "plant" and "animal" ornaments. By having one polar and one non-polar generating translation axis, they produce an impression of directed motion in the direction parallel to the reflection lines, which usually coincides with a vertical or horizontal line. In the same way as in friezes with the symmetry group 1m, the visual dynamism of these ornaments can be increased by choosing an adequate fundamental region or elementary asymmetric figure belonging to it. There are no enantiomorphic modifications. The form of the fundamental region may be arbitrary, but requires at least one rectilinear boundary.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pm in Paleolithic art (Ardales, Gorge d'Enfer, Romanelli caves). |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pm in the Neolithic art of the Middle East (Hacilar, Tell el Hallaf, around 6000 B.C.). |
Ornaments with the symmetry group pm in Neolithic art (Tell Arpachiyah, around 6000 B.C.; Siyalk II, Eridu culture, around 5800 B.C.; Starchevo, around 5500 B.C.; Hacilar, around 5700-5000 B.C.; Namazga I, around 4000 B.C.). |
Ornaments with the symmetry group pm: (a) Egypt, 18th dynasty; (b) Bubastis, Egypt, 1250 B.C.; (c) Troy, around 1500 B.C.; (d) the ethnical art of the Eskimos, Alaska, around 1825; (e) Japan; (f) the Mittla palace, the pre-Columbian period of America. |
In ornamental art, friezes with the symmetry group 1g occur relatively seldom, so the same holds for ornaments with the symmetry group pg (Figure 2.68, 2.69). The appearance of friezes with the symmetry group 1g in Paleolithic ornamental art (e.g., in stylized plant motifs) offers some evidence to believe that also ornaments with the symmetry group pg originate from the Paleolithic. In Neolithic ornamental art this symmetry group mostly occurs in geometric ornaments, while in the pre-dynastic period of Egypt and Mesopotamia it was frequently used with zoomorphic motifs. In ornaments with the symmetry group pg both generating translation axes are polar. Since the symmetry group pg contains indirect isometries - glide reflections - enantiomorphic modifications do not occur. In the visual sense, ornaments with the symmetry group pg produce a visual impression of one-way alternating motion.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pg: (a) Nuzi ceramics, Minoan period; (b) Mussian, Elam, around 5000 B.C.; (c) Hallaf, around 6000 B.C. (7600-6900 B.C.?); (d) Eridu culture, around 4500-4200 B.C.; (e) Hacilar, around 5700-5000 B.C.; (f) Naqda culture, Egypt, around 3600-3200 B.C.; (g) Adriatic zone, around 3000-2000 B.C.; (h) Iran, around 5000 B.C. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pg in the ornamental art of Africa. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group pmg (Figure 2.70-2.73), and corresponding friezes with the symmetry group mg, originate from the Paleolithic. Most probably, the symmetry group pmg is one of the oldest symmetry groups of ornaments used in ornamental art. Their first and most frequent visual interpretations are as stylized motifs of waves. The symmetry group pmg is the most frequent symmetry group of ornaments in Paleolithic and Neolithic ornamental art throughout the world.
Regarding the frequency and variety of corresponding ornaments, only the symmetry group of ornaments p2 can be compared with it. It is probably impossible to find a culture and its prehistoric ornamental art without ornaments with the symmetry group pmg. Also, by having many various ornaments (Figure 2.71), it offers the possibility to analyze the connections between different Paleolithic and Neolithic cultures, distant both in space and time, by the similarity of the motifs they used. The symmetry group pmg contains reflections with the reflection lines perpendicular to one generating translation axis and parallel to the other, and central reflections, so that the first generating translation axis will be non-polar and the second bipolar. Enantiomorphic modifications do not exist. Owing to the bipolarity of the other generating translation axis and to glide reflections that produce the visual impression of two-way alternating motion, ornaments with the symmetry group pmg will be dynamic ones. On the other hand, as their static component, the reflections produce the impression of balance. A fundamental region is usually rectangular, and requires one rectilinear boundary that belongs to a reflection line. In Paleolithic and Neolithic ornamental art, ornaments with the symmetry group pmg mostly occur as geometric ornaments with stylized "water" and meander motifs. Later, the symmetry group pmg occurs in plant or even zoomorphic ornaments, where an initial figure - a rosette with the symmetry group D1 (m) - is multiplied by means of a glide reflection, perpendicular to the reflection line of the rosette. Afterward, the constructed frieze with the symmetry group mg is repeated by a translation perpendicular to the frieze axis. Most frequently, ornaments with the symmetry group pmg are constructed by a direct translational repetition of the corresponding frieze with the symmetry group mg by means of a translation perpendicular to the frieze axis. A spectrum of the symbolic meanings of ornaments with the symmetry group pmg is defined by their geometric and visual properties. Therefore, such ornaments are suitable for presenting periodic alternating non-polar phenomena.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pmg in Paleolithic art: (a) Mezin, USSR, around 12000-10000 B.C.; (b) the Paleolithic of Europe; (c) Pernak, Estonia, around 10000 B.C.; (d) Shtetin, Magdalenian period. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pmg in Neolithic art (Susa, Harrap, Butmir, Danilo, Vincha A, Lobositz). |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pmg in the Neolithic art of the Middle East (Persia, around 4000-3000 B.C.; Samara, around 6000 B.C.; Siyalk, around 4000 B.C.; Susa 5500-5000 B.C.) and in the art of the pre-dynastic and early dynastic period of Egypt (Dendereh, Abydos). |
Ornaments with the symmetry group pmg: (a) Egypt, dynastic period; (b) Troy, around 1500 B.C.; (c) the ethnical art of Oceania. |
Static ornaments with the symmetry group pmm (Figure 2.74-2.76) date from Paleolithic art, occuring as cave wall paintings and bone or stone engravings. Originally, they were used in their simplest form - as a rectangular lattice - and later, as its various paraphrases realized by an elementary asymmetric figure belonging to the fundamental region. Reflections with the reflection lines perpendicular to the generating translation axes cause the non-polarity of both generating translation axes, and a high degree of stationariness and balance. The impression of stability can be stressed if fundamental natural directions - a vertical and horizontal line - coincide with the generating translation axes. In ornamental art, ornaments with the symmetry group pmm usually are in that position. Also, the existence of horizontal reflections restricts the area of suitable ornamental motifs to rosettes with a symmetry group having as a subgroup the symmetry group D2 (2m). Among them, rosettes with geometric and plant (e.g., flower) motifs prevail. The use of zoomorphic motifs is restricted to a minimum. This is because the symmetry group D2 (2m) occurs as a subgroup of the complete symmetry group only in sessile living organisms, while all non-sessile forms of life are characterized by their polarity - their orientation in space. The polarity of living things in the vertical direction and their upward orientation makes impossible the use of zoomorphic ornaments with the symmetry group pmm. The stated polarity contradicts the existence of horizontal mirror symmetry, so that in such an ornament half of the figures will be in an unnatural position. Since the symmetry group \bold p\bold m\bold m is generated by reflections (\bold p\bold m\bold m = {R1,R3} ×{R2,R4} = D¥ ×D¥), its fundamental region must be a rectangle.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pmm in Paleolithic art: (a) Mezin, USSR, around 12000 B.C.; (b) example of a rectangular Bravais lattice, the Lasco cave; (c) Laugerie Haute. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group pmm (a) Middle Empire, Egypt; (b) the ethnical art of Africa. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pmm in the
Neolithic art of the Middle East (Eridu culture, Hallaf, Catal Hüjük)
and the |
The reasons for a relatively rare use of the symmetry group pgg in ornamental art (Figure 2.77-2.79) are connected with the difficulty in recognizing the regularities these ornaments are based on and their constructional complexity. As opposed to ornaments with symmetry groups possessing "evident" symmetry elements consisting of one elementary symmetry transformation, or to symmetry groups, derived as extensions of corresponding symmetry groups of friezes by means of a non-parallel translation, the symmetry group pgg is generated by two complex, composite symmetry transformations - perpendicular glide reflections. Just how difficult it is to perceive these "hidden symmetries", recognize them, construct the corresponding ornaments and discover the symmetry group pgg, is proved by the fact that it is the only symmetry group of ornaments omitted by C. Jordan (1868/69). Ornaments with the symmetry group pgg are usually realized by the multiplication of a frieze with the symmetry group 1g by a glide reflection perpendicular to the frieze axis. Since in Paleolithic and Neolithic ornamental art friezes with the symmetry group 1g occur seldom, this especially refers to ornaments with the symmetry group pgg. The oldest examples of these ornaments can be found in the Neolithic (Figure 2.77) and in the ornamental art of ancient civilizations (Figure 2.78). Besides layered patterns with the resulting symmetry group pgg, antisymmetry ornaments with the antisymmetry group pmg/ pgg (Figure 2.102l) are treated by the classical theory of symmetry as ornaments with the symmetry group pgg. Namely, the symmetry group pgg can be realized by a desymmetrization of the symmetry group pmg, where the reflections are replaced by glide reflections. In the classical theory of symmetry this can be achieved by a complex, and in a technical sense inconvenient way, by eliminating the mirror symmetry and by changing the shape of a fundamental region. By the antisymmetry desymmetrization - black-white coloring resulting in the antisymmetry group pmg/pgg - this may be realized more easily. A fundamental region of the symmetry group pgg usually is a rectangle, offering a change of the shape. In ornaments with the symmetry group pgg both generating translation axes are bipolar, producing the impression of maximal visual dynamism. On the other hand, the visual dynamism of these ornaments represents a drawback in the sense of perceiving symmetry elements, constructing corresponding ornaments and defining a fundamental region. Thanks to a high degree of dynamism and bipolarity of generating translation axes, ornaments with the symmetry group pgg are mainly used with geometric and plant ornamental motifs, as symbolic interpretations of double-alternating motions. As singular directions, the natural perpendiculars - vertical and horizontal lines - may be taken. So that, the recognition of symmetry elements may be made easier - this being difficult in a slanting position of glide reflection axis with respect to the observer.
Ornaments with the symmetry group pgg in Neolithic art: (a) Jarmo culture, around 5300 B.C.; (b) Catal Hüjük, around 6380-5790 B.C.; (c) Djeblet el Beda, around 6000 B.C.; (d) Tripolian culture, USSR, around 4000-3000 B.C.; (e) Siyalk, Iran, around 4000 B.C.; (f) Susa and Butmir, around 5000-4000 B.C. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group pgg in the art of Egypt and the Aegean cultures. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group pgg: (a) Columbia, around 800-1500; (b) pre-Columbian art, Peru; (c) the ethnical art of Oceania. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group cm or cmm (Figure 2.80-2.88) are based on a rhombic lattice, the lattice with equal sides, appearing in Paleolithic ornamental art on bone engravings. The origin of a rhombic lattice and its use may be interpreted as a manifestation of the principle of visual entropy - maximal symmetry and maximal simplicity in the visual and constructional sense. The replacement of the unequal sides of a lattice of parallelograms with equal sides results in the symmetrization of the lattice, changing its cell symmetry from the symmetry group C2 (2) to the symmetry group D2 (2m). Ornaments with the symmetry group cmm originated earlier, in their most elementary form as a rhombic lattice with a rectilinear fundamental region (Figure 2.85c). Ornaments with the symmetry group cm or cmm maybe originate, respectively, from ornaments with the symmetry group pm or pmm constructed by a translational repetition of a rosette with the symmetry group D1 (m) or D2 (2m) by two perpendicular translations, where "gaps" between the rosettes are filled with the same rosettes in the same position - by centering.
Ornaments with the symmetry group cm (Figure 2.80-2.84) possess one polar diagonal generating translation. They are convenient for suggesting directed motion. Owing to the indirect isometries - reflections - enantiomorphic modifications do not occur. A fundamental region is often triangular, with one rectilinear side. Apart from by the construction proposed above - by means of rosettes with the symmetry group D1 (m) - such ornaments may be also obtained by a desymmetrization of the symmetry group cmm, where one reflection must be eliminated either by changing the shape of the fundamental region or by a coloring. In the classical theory of symmetry, antisymmetry ornaments with the antisymmetry group cmm/ cm are included in the class of ornaments with the symmetry group cm (Figure 2.102g). Ornaments with the symmetry group cm may also be constructed by multiplying a frieze with the symmetry group 1g by a reflection with the reflection line parallel to the frieze axis.
The example of the ornament with the symmetry group cm in Paleolithic art. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group cm in Neolithic art: (a) Susa, around 6000 B.C.; (b) Hallaf, around 6000 B.C.; (c) Haldea, around 5000 B.C.; (d) Nezvisko, USSR, around 5000 B.C.; (e) Hallaf; (f) antisymmetry ornament with antisymmetry group pm/cm, treated by the classical theory of symmetry as the symmetry group cm, Hallaf. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group cm in Neolithic art: (a) Tell Tschagar Bazaar; (b) Tell Arpachiyah; (c) Hallaf; (d) Eridu culture; (e) Susa; (f) Hacilar; (g) Tripolian culture; (h) Namazga; (i) Starchevo. These ornaments belong to the period 6500-3500 B.C. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group cm in Neolithic art (Mohenjo Daro, Niniva, Tepe Aly, Hacilar, Tell i Jari, around 6000-3500 B.C.). |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group cm: (a) Egypt, 2310 B.C.; (b) the Knossos palace; (c) Egypt; (d) Pseira; (e) Egypt, 1830 B.C.; (f) Arabian ornament; (g) the Mittla palace, the pre-Columbian period of America; (h) Gothic ornament. |
Ornaments with the symmetry group cmm (Figure 2.85-2.88) possess one non-polar diagonal and one bipolar generating translation axis. There are no enantiomorphic modifications. A fundamental region is often triangular, with two rectilinear sides belonging to reflection lines. Since in ornamental art, especially in the Paleolithic and Neolithic, friezes with the symmetry group mg are the most frequent, the origin of ornaments with the symmetry group cmm can be understood as a multiplication of a frieze with the symmetry group mg by a reflection with the reflection line parallel to the frieze axis. This is the reason that ornaments with the symmetry group cmm are used so much and are in such variety. In the classical theory of symmetry, antisymmetry ornaments with the antisymmetry group pmm/cmm (Figure 2.102b) are included in the class of ornaments with the symmetry group cmm, thus enriching it considerably.
Ornaments with the symmetry group cmm in Paleolithic art: (a) Polesini cave; (b) Laugerie Haute; (c) Pindel, Vogelherd. |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group cmm in the Neolithic art of the Middle East (Hallaf, Catal Hüjük). |
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group cmm in Neolithic art (Susa, Hajji Mohammed, Siyalk, Hacilar, Lendel culture, around 6000-3000 B.C.). |
Ornaments with the symmetry group cmm in Neolithic art, Hallaf, around 6000 B.C. (7600-6900 B.C.?). |
The class of ornaments appearing much later and occurring in
ornamental art seldom consists of ornaments with the symmetry groups
p3, p3m and p31m, belonging to the
hexagonal crystal system (Figure 2.89, 2.90). All previously discussed
symmetry groups of ornaments can be realized in a simple way, as primary
plane lattices (Bravais lattices) or by composing the symmetry groups of
friezes with the simplest symmetry groups of rosettes D1
(m) or C2 (2), generated by a reflection
or by a central reflection.
Ornamental motifs that suggest the symmetry of plane ornaments with
three-fold rotations: (a) Hallaf, around 6000 B.C. (7600-6900 B.C.?); (b)
Mohenjo Daro, around 4500-4000 B.C.; (c) Tripolian culture, around
4000-3500 B.C.; (d) the interlaced motif, Egypt, early dynastic period.
Ornaments with three-fold rotations: (a) p3; (b) p31m;
(c) p3m1.
Ornaments with the symmetry group p3 may be constructed
by multiplying a rosette with the symmetry group C3 (
3) by two non-parallel translations with translation vectors of the same
intensity, constructing a 60o-angle or by multiplying a frieze with the
symmetry group 11 by a trigonal rotation. Since natural forms
with the symmetry group C3 (3) occur seldom,
the absence of these natural models accounted for the absence of ornaments
with the symmetry group p3 in the earliest periods of ornamental
art. A few older examples of ornaments containing rosettes with the symmetry
group C3 (3) deviate from the exact rules of
symmetry (Figure 2.89) and only suggest the p3-symmetry, which
would be used consequently in the ornamental art of the ancient
civilizations (of Egypt, China, etc.) (Figure 2.90). The usual shape of a
fundamental region of the symmetry group p3 is a rhombus with a
60o-angle, offering great possibilities for variations and for
curvilinear boundaries. Ornaments with the symmetry group p3
possess enantiomorphic modifications. Since they contain two dynamic polar
components - polar translation axes and trigonal polar oriented rotations,
such ornaments are dynamic ones. Their visual dynamism can be stressed by
using a suitable shape of the fundamental region or of an elementary
asymmetric figure belonging to the fundamental region. Representing the
result of a superposition of the symmetry groups 11 and
C3 (3), the symmetry group p3 possesses three
singular polar directions, so that the corresponding ornaments produce an
impression of a three-way directed motion. As a subgroup of the index 4 of
the symmetry group p6, the symmetry group p3 may be
derived by a desymmetrization of the symmetry group p6m, or even
by a desymmetrization of the symmetry group p6. The symmetry
group p6 is the subgroup of the index 2 of the symmetry group
p6m, and the symmetry group p3 is the subgroup of the
index 2 of the symmetry group p6. This offers many
possibilities for classical-symmetry or antisymmetry desymmetrizations, in
particular, for the antisymmetry desymmetrization resulting in the
antisymmetry group p6/p3, treated by the classical
theory of symmetry as the symmetry group p3 (Figure 2.90a,
2.102d).
Ornaments with the symmetry groups p31m and
p3m1 differ among themselves by the position of reflection lines. In
ornaments with the symmetry group p31m reflection lines are
parallel to the generating translation axis, while in ornaments with the
symmetry group p3m1 they are perpendicular to it. Regarding their
origin, both groups can be understood as a result of superposition of the
symmetry group of rosettes D3 (3m) and the symmetry
group of friezes 11, where in ornaments with the symmetry group
p31m the frieze axis is parallel to the reflection line of the
rosette, while in ornaments with the symmetry group p3m1 it is
perpendicular to the reflection line. Also, we may consider the symmetry
group p31m as the superposition of the symmetry group of
rosettes C3 (3) and the symmetry group of friezes
1m, and the symmetry group p3m1 as the superposition
of the same symmetry group C3 (3) and the symmetry
group of friezes m1.
From there result the following common
properties of these two groups: the symmetry groups p31m and
p3m1 are the subgroups of the index 2 of the symmetry group
p6m, so they can be derived by desymmetrizations of the symmetry
group p6m, in particular, by antisymmetry desymmetrizations.
Owing to reflections with reflection lines incident with trigonal rotation
centers, the symmetry group p3m1 is characterized by the
non-polarity of all trigonal rotations. In ornaments with the symmetry
group p31m half of the trigonal rotation centers are incident to
reflection lines, and the others are not, so the symmetry group
p31m contains the polar and non-polar trigonal rotations. In both symmetry
groups, the indirect transformations - reflections - cause the absence
of the enantiomorphism. In ornaments with the symmetry groups
p31m and p3m1 glide reflections parallel with reflection lines
appear as secondary elements of symmetry. The different position of
reflection lines with respect to the generating translation axes causes
certain relevant constructional and visual-symbolic differences between the
corresponding ornaments.
Same as their generating friezes with the symmetry group
1m, ornaments with the symmetry group p31m, that contain a
reflection parallel to the generating translation axis, have a polar,
oriented generating translation axis. From this the visual dynamism of
ornaments with the symmetry group p31m results. They produce the
impression of three-way directed motion. A fundamental region of the
symmetry group p31m is usually defined by a longer diagonal and
by two sides of the rhombic fundamental region already mentioned in the case
of the symmetry group p3, where these two sides can be replaced
with adequate curvilinear contours. This makes possible different variations
and the emphasis or alleviation of the dynamic visual impression produced
by the corresponding ornaments. Despite the existing conditions for a
variety of ornaments with the symmetry group p31m, in old
ornamental art they occur relatively seldom, mainly because of their
constructional complexity and the absence of natural models. Their full
affirmation will come in the ornamental art of the developed ancient
civilizations (Figure 2.90). Examples of the symmetry group p31m
may be obtained by a desymmetrization of the symmetry group p6m
in which the symmetry group p31m is the subgroup of the index 2.
Owing to the constructional complexity of the corresponding antisymmetry
mosaics, the antisymmetry group p6m/p31m, treated by
the classical theory of symmetry as the symmetry group p31m , is
poorly represented in ornamental art (A.V. Shubnikov, N.V. Belov et al.,
1964, pp. 220).
Similar to the corresponding symmetry group of friezes
m1, the symmetry group of ornaments p3m1 contains reflections
with reflection lines perpendicular to the generating translation axis, that
cause the non-polarity of the axis. Therefore, in a geometric and
visual-symbolic sense, the symmetry group p3m1 can be considered
as a static equivalent of the symmetry group p31m. The fundamental
region of the symmetry group p3m1 is an equilateral triangle.
The symmetry group p3m1 (D) is generated by
reflections, that require a rectilinear triangular fundamental region and
restrict the area of the corresponding classical-symmetry ornaments to the
use of some elementary asymmetric figure belonging to a fundamental region,
resulting in a marked isohedral tiling (B. Grünbaum,
G.C. Shephard, 1987). No desymmetrization of a fundamental region of the
symmetry group D3 (3m) can be achieved by changing
its shape. Therefore, an internal desymmetrization of the fundamental region
becomes indispensable, making impossible a visual interpretation of the
symmetry group p3m1 accompanied by an isohedral tiling, without a
previous internal desymmetrization of the fundamental region. A fundamental
region must be rectilinear in all the groups generated by reflections:
pmm, p4m, p6m and p3m1. Except
the symmetry group p3m1, this fact has no influence on the
possibility to construct an isohedral tiling with a tile serving as the
fundamental region of the symmetry group discussed. Only in the symmetry
group p3m1, where this tiling is a regular tessellation
{3,6} , there comes the symmetrization by composing six equilateral
triangles with a common vertex and each with the symmetry group
D3 (3m). The result is the isohedral tiling with the symmetry
group p6m. Therefore, in ornamental art, the symmetry group
p3m1 occurs seldom, especially in the earlier period (Figure
2.90c). Distinct from classical-symmetry ornaments with the symmetry group
p3m1, antisymmetry ornaments with the antisymmetry group
p6m/p3m1, in the classical theory of symmetry treated
as ornaments with the symmetry group p3m1, are some most frequent
antisymmetry ornaments. The antisymmetry group p6m/p3m1
can be derived by the antisymmetry desymmetrization of the symmetry group
p6m, where the adjacent equilateral triangles of a regular
tessellation {3,6} are colored oppositely (Figure 2.102n). Their
generating symmetry group p6m is one of the most frequent
symmetry groups in the whole of ornamental art, while their constructional
and visual simplicity caused the frequent occurrence of ornaments with the
antisymmetry group p6m/p3m1.
The symmetry group p6 belongs to the hexagonal crystal
system. The corresponding ornaments (Figure 2.91) may be constructed by
multiplying a rosette with the symmetry group C6 (6)
by means of two non-parallel translations with translation vectors of the
same intensity, constructing a 60o-angle. The symmetry group
p6 can be obtained by superposing the symmetry group of friezes
11 and the symmetry group of rosettes C6 (6), or
by composing the symmetry group of friezes 12 and the symmetry
group of rosettes C3 (3). The oldest examples of
ornaments with the symmetry group p6 date from the ancient
civilizations (Figure 2.91c,d). Owing to their constructional complexity and
the lack of models in nature, in ornamental art they are rather rare. A
fundamental region of the symmetry group p6 may by an equilateral
triangle with sides that can be replaced by curved lines. This results in
the variety of ornaments with the symmetry group p6. The
enantiomorphism occurs. Since central reflections are elements of the
symmetry group p6, the generating translation axes will be
bipolar. Although their dynamic visual effect is alleviated by central
reflections and by the bipolarity of the generating translation axes,
ornaments with the symmetry group p6 belong to a family of
dynamic ornaments. In them, it is possible to recognize three
singular bipolar directions. The symmetry group p6 is the
subgroup of the index 2 of the symmetry group p6m, so that
examples of the symmetry group p6 can be constructed by a
desymmetrization of the symmetry group p6m, this means, of
regular tessellations {3,6} or {6,3} . Aiming to
eliminate reflections and to maintain the symmetry p6,
besides classical-symmetry desymmetrizations, antisymmetry
desymmetrizations are used. As a result, antisymmetry ornaments
with the antisymmetry group p6m/p6, considered by the
classical theory of symmetry as ornaments with the symmetry group
p6, may be obtained (Figure 2.102o).
Ornaments with the symmetry group p6: (a) Butmir, around 4000
B.C.; (b) Pseira; (c) Cyclades, around 2500 B.C.; (d) Crete and Egypt.
The symmetry group p6m (Figure 2.92, 2.93) is the maximal
symmetry group of the hexagonal crystal system. The oldest and most frequent
ornaments with the symmetry group p6m are regular tessellations
{3,6} and {6,3} . The tessellation {6,3} dates from the
Paleolithic (Figure 2.92a), occurring on a bone engraving. This tessellation
and its corresponding symmetry group p6m probably originated from
natural models - honeycombs - the
regularity and symmetry of which has always attracted the attention of
artists and mathematicians. Its dual tessellation { 3,6} also dates
from Paleolithic ornamental art (Figure 2.92b). Both ornamental motifs
mentioned, either in their elementary form or with various paraphrases,
occured in ornamental art of different civilizations. Ornaments with the
symmetry group p6m may be constructed by multiplying a rosette
with the symmetry group D6 (6m) by means of two non-parallel
translations with translation vectors of the same intensity,
constructing a 60o-angle, or by composing the symmetry group
of friezes mm and the symmetry group of rosettes
C6 (6). Owing to its constructional complexity, the
other construction is not as frequent as the first. A fundamental
region of the symmetry group p6m is a right-angled triangle
defined by the sides and altitude of an equilateral triangle
that corresponds to a regular tessellation {3,6}. Since the
symmetry group p6m is generated by reflections, its
fundamental region must be rectilinear. The variety of ornaments
with the symmetry group p6m can be realized only by using
some asymmetric figure that belongs to a fundamental region.
There are no enantiomorphic modifications. The generating
translations and 6-fold rotations are non-polar. A static
visual component caused by reflections is dominant. Besides
having an important role in ornamental art, the symmetry group
p6m can serve as a basis for the derivation of all the
symmetry groups of the hexagonal crystal system by
classical-symmetry, antisymmetry and colored-symmetry
desymmetrizations. All the groups of the hexagonal crystal system
are subgroups of the symmetry group p6m. The symmetry
groups p31m and p3m1 are its subgroups of the index
2, and p3 is its subgroup of the index 4 (H.S.M. Coxeter,
W.O.J. Moser, 1980). Each subgroup of the index 2 may be derived
from its supergroup by an antisymmetry desymmetrization.
Regarding the frequency of occurrence, the symmetry group
p6m is one of the most frequent symmetry groups in ornamental
art, proving that the principle of visual entropy - the aim
toward maximal constructional and visual simplicity and maximal
symmetry - is fully respected.
Ornaments with the symmetry group p6m in Paleolithic art: (a)
regular tessellation {6,3} , the motif of honeycomb, Yeliseevichi,
USSR, around 10000 B.C.; (b) the example of regular tessellation {3,6}
in the Paleolithic art of Europe (Magdalenian).
Ornaments with the symmetry group p6m: (a)
Egypt, early dynastic period; (b) Sakara, around 2680 B.C.; (c)
Egypt, around 1450 B.C.; (d) Tepe Guran, around 6000 B.C.; (e)
Susa, around 6000 B.C.; (f) Samara, around 5000 B.C.; (g) Middle
East, around 5000-4000 B.C.; (h) Greco-Roman mosaic.
The square crystal system consists of the symmetry groups
of ornaments p4 (Figure 2.94), p4g (Figure
2.95-2.97) and p4m (Figure 2.98-2.101). Frequent examples
of ornaments with the symmetry groups of the square crystal
system are mainly a result of the constructional and visual
simplicity of a square lattice - regular tessellation
{4,4} - on which these ornaments are based. The oldest
examples of a square lattice date from the Paleolithic stone
or bone engravings. By uniting two fundamental
properties - division of a plane into squares, and perpendicularity - a
regular tessellation {4,4} possesses the maximal symmetry group
p4m of the square crystal system and serves as a basis for
the construction of all ornaments with the symmetry groups
belonging to this crystal system. Because all discrete symmetry
groups of ornaments, except the groups of the hexagonal crystal
system based on regular tessellations {3,6} or {6,3} , are its
subgroups, the symmetry group p4m and its corresponding
square regular tessellation {4,4} can serve as a starting point
for the derivation and visual interpretation of all the subgroups
mentioned by the desymmetrization method. The symmetry group
p6m corresponding to regular tessellations {3,6} and {6,3}
possesses a similar property and contains as subgroups, except
the groups of the square crystal system, all the remaining
discrete symmetry groups of ornaments. Owing to its visual and
constructional simplicity, a regular tessellation {4,4} and the
corresponding symmetry group p4m has become the richest
source for deriving symmetry groups of ornaments by the
desymmetrization method. Regular tessellations {3,6} , {6,3} and
the corresponding symmetry group p6m will serve only for
constructing ornaments with symmetry groups of a lower degree of
symmetry, which cannot be realized by the desymmetrization method
from a regular tessellation {4,4} - this means, for deriving by
the desymmetrization method, the symmetry groups p3,
p31m, p3m, p6 and p6m of the hexagonal crystal
system.
Ornaments with symmetry group p4: (a) Starchevo, Yugoslavia,
around 5500-5000 B.C.; (b) Egypt and Aegean cultures; (c) Akhbar
school, India; (d) the ethnical art, Africa.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p4g in Neolithic
art: (a) Tripolian culture, USSR, around 4000 B.C.; (b) Hallaf, around
6000 B.C.; (c) Catal Hüjük, around 6400-5800 B.C.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p4g in the art of
the dynastic period of Egypt.
Ornaments with the symmetry group p4g: (a) Crete; (b) Aegina,
around 5000 B.C.; (c) Thebes, Egypt, around 1500 B.C.; (d)
Greco-Roman mosaic.
The symmetry group p4 is the minimal symmetry group of the
square crystal system. It can be derived as an extension of the symmetry
group of rosettes C4 (4) by means of a discrete group of
translations generated by two perpendicular translations with translation
vectors of the same intensity. Also, it can be derived as a superposition of
the symmetry group of friezes 12 and the symmetry group of rosettes
C4 (4) or by a desymmetrization of the symmetry group p4m
in which the symmetry group p4 is the subgroup of the index 2 . Since
the symmetry group p4 does not contain indirect isometries, there is a
possibility for enantiomorphism. Owing to the visual dynamism caused by the
absence of reflections, the possibility of enantiomorphism, and the
bipolarity of generating translation axes and polarity of 4-rotations,
the visual and constructional simplicity of a regular tessellation {4,4} is
not so expressed in ornaments with the symmetry group p4.
In constructing ornaments with the symmetry group p4, all
construction methods will have almost equal importance. Owing
to their low degree of symmetry and complex construction,
ornaments with the symmetry group p4 are not as frequent
as ornaments with the symmetry groups p4g and p4m
belonging to the same crystal system. The oldest examples of
ornaments with the symmetry group p4 originate from
Neolithic ceramics (Figure 2.94). These ornaments are constructed
by multiplying a frieze with the symmetry group 12, with
the "wave" motif based on a double spiral, by the
transformations of the symmetry group C4 (4).
Usually, a fundamental region of the symmetry group p4 is
an isosceles right-angled triangle defined by the immediate
vertices and the center of a square of the regular tessellation
{4,4} . Aiming for a variety of the corresponding ornaments,
a curvilinear fundamental region may be used. Polar, oriented
four-fold rotations are a dynamic visual component of ornaments
with the symmetry group p4. Therefore, although they do
produce a visual suggestion of motion, and this is somewhat
alleviated by the visual effect produced by the central
reflections and by the bipolarity of the generating translation
axes, such ornaments belong to a family of visually dynamic
ornaments. They offer the possibility for the visual distinction
of four singular bipolar directions that correspond to the
generating frieze with the symmetry group 12. Since the
symmetry group p4 is the subgroup of the index 2 of the
maximal symmetry group p4m of the square crystal system, it
is possible to derive the symmetry group p4 by a
desymmetrization of the symmetry group p4m. Since it is
also the subgroup of the index 2 of the group p4g,
desymmetrizations of the symmetry group p4g may be used to
obtain ornaments with the symmetry group p4. That
especially refers to the antisymmetry desymmetrization resulting
in the antisymmetry group p4g/p4, by the classical
theory of symmetry discussed as the symmetry group p4.
Ornaments with the symmetry group p4g (Figure
2.95-2.97) may be constructed by the multiplication of a rosette
with the symmetry group C4 (4) by means of two
perpendicular reflections that do not contain the center of this
rosette. The same symmetry group can be derived as a
superposition of the symmetry group of friezes 1g and the
symmetry group of rosettes C4 (4) or by a
desymmetrization of the symmetry group of ornaments p4m, in
which the group p4g is the subgroup of the index 2. The
symmetry group p4g corresponds to a uniform tessellation
s{4,4} , i.e. (4.82) (H.S.M. Coxeter, W.O.J. Moser, 1980;
B. Grünbaum, G.C. Shephard, 1987). According to the criterion
of maximal constructional simplicity, a desymmetrization of the
symmetry group p4m or the multiplication of a rosette with
the symmetry group C4 (4) by means of two
perpendicular reflections, non incident with the rosette center,
will be the prevailing methods for constructing ornaments with
the symmetry group p4g. The oldest ornaments with the
symmetry group p4g appear in Neolithic ceramics (Figure
2.95). In ornamental art of the ancient civilizations such
ornaments, with somewhat changed Neolithic motifs, are very
frequent. This especially refers to the ornaments with the
symmetry group p4g using "swastika" motifs, which appeared
as early as the Neolithic (Figure 2.95b).
Therefore, a detailed comparative analysis of the repetition of
that and some other ornamental motifs can be useful in the study of the
inter-cultural relations and influences that occurred in the Neolithic
period and at the beginning of ancient civilizations. Usually, a fundamental
region of the symmetry group p4g is an isosceles right-angled
triangle defined by the
centers of adjacent sides and by the corresponding vertex of a square of
the regular tessellation {4,4} . Aiming to increase the variety of ornaments
with the symmetry group p4g and to emphasize or decrease the intensity
of the dynamic visual effect produced by them, its edges can be replaced by
curved lines. The generating translation axes are bipolar. Despite the
secondary reflections and the absence of the enantiomorphism, the four-fold
rotations are polar, since these reflections do not contain the four-fold
rotation centers. Owing to the four-fold polar, oriented rotations and glide
reflections, ornaments with the symmetry group p4g belong to a family
of extremely dynamic ornaments in the visual sense. They suggest a motion by
their parts and by the whole, which is only partly offset by the static
visual effect produced by the secondary reflections. Ornaments with the
symmetry group p4g offer the possibility for the visual distinction
of generating rosettes with the symmetry group C4 (4) and
generating friezes with the symmetry group mg. According to the
principle of visual entropy, a visual recognition of their symmetry
substructures will be hindered by the visual dynamism of these
ornaments and by the visual dominance of glide reflections as the elements
of symmetry. The symmetry group p4g
is the subgroup of the index 2 of the symmetry
group p4m, so that desymmetrizations of the symmetry group p4m
and of a regular tessellation {4,4} can be efficiently used for
constructing ornaments with the symmetry group p4g. Besides
classical-symmetry desymmetrizations, antisymmetry desymmetrizations
resulting in the antisymmetry group p4m/p4g, by the classical
theory of symmetry considered as the symmetry group p4g, frequently
occur (Figure 2.102h).
The most frequent symmetry group of ornaments is the maximal
symmetry group p4m of the square crystal system (Figure
2.98-2.101), which corresponds to a regular tessellation {4,4} .
Besides their large independent application, the symmetry group
p4m plays an important role in the construction of all
ornaments, except those with the symmetry groups of the
hexagonal crystal system, by the desymmetrization method.
Besides the property of regularity, a regular tessellation {4,4}
possesses another fundamental property - the existence of two
perpendicular generating translation axes incident to
reflection lines. Since all the discrete symmetry groups of
ornaments, except the groups of the hexagonal crystal system,
are subgroups of the symmetry group p4m, it can serve as a
basis for the derivation of all the discrete symmetry groups of
ornaments by the desymmetrization method, in the first place for
those symmetry groups with perpendicular generating translation
axes: pm , pg, pmm, pmg, pgg,
cm, cmm, p4, p4g. Besides classical-symmetry
desymmetrizations, antisymmetry desymmetrizations resulting in
all the subgroups of the index 2 of the symmetry group p4m
- pmm, cmm, p4, p4g, p4m and
color-symmetry desymmetrizations, may also be used. Ornaments
with the symmetry group p4m can be constructed by
multiplying a frieze with the maximal symmetry group of friezes
mm by means of a four-fold rotation, by multiplying a
rosette with the symmetry group D4 (4m) by means
of two perpendicular translations with translation vectors of the
same intensity, or by means of a regular tessellation {4,4} .
According to the principle of maximal constructional simplicity,
the dominant methods for constructing ornaments with the symmetry
group p4m will be by a square regular tessellation {4,4}
or the translational multiplication of a rosette with the
symmetry group D4 (4m) . Early ornaments with the
symmetry group p4m date from the Paleolithic, occurring
as bone engravings representing an elementary square lattice -
regular tessellation {4,4} (Figure 2.98). The further development
of ornamental art tended toward the enrichment of ornamental
motifs (Figure 2.99, 2.100). A fundamental region of the
symmetry group p4m is an isosceles right-angled triangle
defined by the center of a side, its belonging
vertex, and the center of a square that
corresponds to the regular tessellation
{4,4} . A fundamental region of all the groups generated by
reflections must be rectilinear, so that
the variety of ornaments with the symmetry group
p4m is reduced to the use of an elementary asymmetric figure belonging
to a fundamental region. Four-fold rotations and generating translations are
non-polar. Enantiomorphic modifications do not occur. Therefore, ornaments
with the symmetry group p4m produce an impression of stationariness
and balance, caused by perpendicular reflections incident to the generating
translation axes.
Examples of ornaments with the symmetry group p4m in Paleolithic
art; the regular tessellation {4,4} .
Ornaments with the symmetry group p4m in Neolithic art (Catal
Hüjük, around 6400-5800 B.C.; Tell Brak, around 6000 B.C.; Tell
Arpachiyah, around 6000 B.C.; Hacilar, around 5700-5000 B.C.).
Ornaments with the symmetry group p4m in Neolithic art and the
pre-dynastic period of Egypt.
The ornament "Frogs" with the symmetry group p4m, the ethnical art,
Africa.
Secondary diagonal reflections contribute to the impression of
stationariness. Since taken for the directions of reflection lines usually
are the fundamental natural directions - vertical and
horizontal line - the dynamic visual component produced by
secondary glide reflections with the axes parallel to the
diagonals is almost irrelevant. It will come to its full
expression in ornaments with symmetry group p4m placed in
such a position that the diagonals coincide with the natural
fundamental directions - the vertical and horizontal line.
Besides the classical-symmetry desymmetrizations, antisymmetry
desymmetrizations resulting in all the subgroups of the index 2
of the symmetry group p4m, and the colored-symmetry
desymmetrizations, are used. Among antisymmetry desymmetrizations
the most frequent is the antisymmetry group p4m/p4m
("chess board") (Figure 2.102j) discussed in the classical theory
of symmetry as the symmetry group p4m.
Examples of antisymmetry ornaments with the antisymmetry group: (a)
p2/p2; (b) pmm/cmm; (c) cmm/pgg; (d)
p6/p3; (e) pmg/pg; (f) pmg/pm; (g)
cmm/cm; (h) p4m/p4g; (i) p4m/p4m; (j)
p4/p4; (k) pmg/pmg; (l) pmg/pgg;
(m) \bold c\bold m\bold m/ pmm; (n) p6m/p3m1; (o) p6m/p6,
the antisymmetry mosaics according to A.V. Shubnikov , N.V. Belov et
al. (1964, pp. 220).
Basic data on antisymmetry desymmetrizations is given in the table
of the most frequent antisymmetry groups of ornaments G2', i.e. the most
frequent classical-symmetry groups that may be derived by antisymmetry
desymmetrizations:
All of them occurred in Neolithic ornamental art (Figure 2.103).
Antisymmetry ornaments in Neolithic art: (a) p1/p1; (b)
p2/p2; (c) p2/p1; (d) pm/p1m; (e)
pmg/pm; (f) pmg/pg; (g) \bold p\bold m/ pm1; (h)
pm/cm; (i) pg/p1; (j) cm/pm; (k)
cm/p1; (l) pmm/pmm; (m) pmm/cmm; (n)
pmg/pmg; (o) p4m/p4g; (p) p6m/p3m1; (q)
cmm/pmm; (r) cmm/cm; (s) cmm/pgg;
(t) pgg/pgg; (u) pgg/pg; (v) p4m/p4m;
(x) p4m/cmm.
Analyzing connections between ornamental art and the theory of
symmetry, we can use the chronology of ornaments, considering as the main
characteristics the time, the methods and the origin of ornaments. The
oldest examples of ornaments date from the Paleolithic and Neolithic and
belong to ornaments with the symmetry groups p1, p2, (pg),
pm, pmg, pmm, cm, cmm, p4m and
p6m. For all the symmetry groups of ornaments, except the symmetry group
pg, we have concrete examples of the corresponding ornaments,
occurring in the Paleolithic stone and bone engravings or cave drawings and
Neolithic ceramic decorations. Since friezes with the symmetry group
1g originate from the Paleolithic, and by their translational repetition
ornaments with the symmetry group pg can be constructed, probably the
same dating holds for ornaments with the symmetry group pg. Another
argument in favor of their early appearance is the existence of models in
nature - the arrangements of leaves in some plants. On the other hand, the
visual dynamism and low degree of symmetry of ornaments with the symmetry
group pg could be account for their absence in Paleolithic ornamental
art and for their somewhat later appearance in the Neolithic. It is also
possible that the symmetry group pg, according to the principle of
visual entropy, was replaced by the symmetry group pmg, very
frequent in Paleolithic and Neolithic ornamental art. The first eight of
the symmetry groups of ornaments mentioned can be derived as superpositions
of symmetry groups of friezes and rosettes, without using rotations of the
order greater than 2. Because the examples of all seven discrete symmetry
groups of friezes 11, 1g, 12, m1, 1m, mg
and mm occur in Paleolithic, this is the simplest method for
constructing ornaments. Five of these symmetry groups of ornaments appear
in the Paleolithic as the Bravais lattices (a lattice of parallelograms
with the symmetry group p2, rectangular pmm, rhombic
(cmm), square (p4m) and hexagonal (p6m)) - the simplest visual
interpretations of the maximal symmetry groups of the crystal systems
bearing the same names. The importance of reflections is proved by their
presence in all the symmetry groups of ornaments mentioned, except p1,
p2 (and pg). This illustrates the dominance of static ornaments
in the visual sense, expressed by the absence of almost all the dynamic
symmetry elements - polar rotations, glide reflections and by a relative
dominance of non-polar and bipolar generating translations over the polar
ones. As generating rosettes there are those with the most frequent symmetry
groups of rosettes: D1 (m), C2
(2), D2 (2m), D4
(4m) and D6 (6m). The symmetry group of
rosettes D2 (2m), besides the presence
of reflections also possesses the
other fundamental property - perpendicularity of reflection
lines that coincide to the fundamental natural directions -
the vertical and horizontal line. This symmetry group is a
subgroup of four of the symmetry groups of ornaments mentioned:
pmm, cmm, p4m, p6m. The two stated
ornaments, p4m and p6m, correspond to regular
tessellations {4,4} and {3,6} or {6,3} , i.e. to the perfect
ornamental forms. With isogons, isohedrons, etc., regular
tessellations belong together to the general tiling theory,
discussed by E.S. Fedorov (1916),
B.N. Delone (1959), H. Heesch,
O. Kienzle (1963), L. Fejes Tòth (1964),
H. Heesch (1968),
A.V. Shubnikov, V.A. Koptsik (1974),
B. Grünbaum, D. Lockenhoff,
G.C. Shephard, A.H. Temesvari (1985), in many
works by B. Grünbaum and G.C. Shephard (e.g., 1977c, 1978,
1983) and in their monograph Tilings and Patterns (1987).
Generating rosettes and friezes serve as the basis for constructing
ornaments. They caused the time of appearance and the frequency of
occurrence of particular symmetry groups of ornaments. Such constructions
are extensions from the "local symmetry" of rosettes and friezes to the
"global symmetry" of ornaments. As a common denominator for all the
characteristics of Paleolithic ornaments we can use the principle of visual
entropy - maximal constructional and visual simplicity and maximal
symmetry.
Models existing in nature are prerequisites for the early
appearance of some symmetry groups of ornaments (p2 - waves,
pmg - water, p6m - a honeycomb). On the other hand, they impose
certain restrictions in ornamental motifs. Since almost all animals and many
plants are mirror-symmetrical, the same holds for ornaments inspired by
those natural models. Even in geometric ornaments, where such restrictions
have no influence, the importance of mirror symmetry in nature served as the
implicit model and caused the dominance of ornaments containing
reflections. The causes of this phenomenon can be found also in the
constructional simplicity of ornaments with reflections, in human mirror
symmetry and binocularity.
In the lather periods - in the Neolithic and in the period of the
ancient civilizations - ornaments with the symmetry groups pg,
pgg, p3, p31m, p3m1, p4, p4g, p6,
appeared. Ornaments with the symmetry groups p3, p31m,
p3m1, p4, p4g, p6 contain rotations of the higher order
- 3, 4, 6 - occurring, until till then, only in
regular tessellations {4,4} , {3,6} and {6,3} , i.e. in the symmetry groups
p4m, p6m. The new symmetry groups caused new construction
problems, in that the construction of ornaments required a very complicated
multiplication of friezes. In these symmetry groups of ornaments, dynamic
symmetry elements - polar rotations, polar generating translations and
glide reflections - prevail. Therefore, with the constructional complexity
of the corresponding ornaments, there is the problem of their
visual complexity - i.e. difficulties in perceiving the
regularities and symmetry principles they are based on. Also,
these symmetry groups of ornaments presented the most problems to
mathematicians.
The exception in this class is the symmetry group p3m1
(D), belonging to the family of the symmetry groups generated by
reflections, and containing non-polar three-fold rotations, non-polar
translations and a high degree of symmetry - favourable conditions for the
early appearance in ornamental art. Its fundamental region is an
equilateral triangle of a regular tessellation {3,6} , which must be
rectilinear because the group p3m1 (D) is generated by
reflections. The symmetry group of a regular tessellation {3,6} is the group
p6m, so that ornaments with the symmetry group p3m1 can be
constructed by a translational multiplication of rosettes with the symmetry
group D3 (3m) or by means of an internal classical-symmetry
desymmetrization of the fundamental region. The use of such an elementary
asymmetric figure belonging to the fundamental region results in a marked
isohedral tiling with the symmetry group p3m1. However,
both methods were not used in the Paleolithic.
Distinct from classical-symmetry ornaments with the symmetry group
p3m1 occurring relatively seldom in ornamental art, antisymmetry
ornaments with the antisymmetry group p6m/p3m1, considered in
the classical theory of symmetry as the symmetry group p3m1, are some
oldest and most frequent antisymmetry ornaments, because they can be
obtained by the antisymmetry desymmetrization of the symmetry group
p6m, in which the symmetry group p3m1 is the subgroup of the index 2,
this means, from a regular tessellation {3,6} .
The stated chronological analysis offers an insight into all
construction problems, the methods of forming ornaments and their origin. It
points out the parallelism between the mathematical approach to ornaments
from the theory of symmetry, and their origins and construction by methods
developed in ornamental art. As basic common construction methods we can
distinguish a frieze multiplication, a rosette multiplication and different
aspects of the desymmetrization method - classical-symmetry, antisymmetry
and color-symmetry desymmetrizations.
Owing to its simplicity, the construction of ornaments by using
friezes (A.V. Shubnikov, V.A. Koptsik, 1974)
is, most probably, the oldest
method of constructing ornaments, since the conditions for
so-doing - the existence of examples of all the symmetry groups
of friezes - were fulfilled already in Paleolithic ornamental
art. Very successful in the construction of Paleolithic
ornaments, this method shows its deficiency in the constructional
complexity for the ornaments with rotations of the higher
order (n = 3, 4, 6). Somewhat more
complex is the method of rosette multiplication in which we must
consider, besides rosettes with a definite symmetry, directions
and intensities of the vectors of generating discrete
translations multiplying these rosettes. Therefore, such a
construction method implicitly introduces problems of plane
Bravais lattices, crystal systems with the same names, and
tessellations.
Occurring in Paleolithic ornamental art are examples of all the five
Bravais lattices corresponding to the symmetry groups p2, pmm,
cmm, p4m and p6m, i.e. to the maximal symmetry groups of
the crystal systems bearing the same names, including regular tessellations
{4,4} (p4m), {3,6} and {6,3} (p6m). Till the Neolithic, the
method of rosette multiplication remained on the level of elementary forms
- Bravais lattices. Later, it was used for the construction of all kinds
of ornaments. In the mathematical theory of symmetry this approach is
discussed by different authors, e.g., by A.V. Shubnikov, N.V. Belov et al.
(1964), and A.V. Shubnikov, V.A. Koptsik (1974).
The desymmetrization method is based on the elimination of adequate
symmetry elements of a given symmetry group, aiming to obtain one of its
subgroups. All the discrete symmetry groups of ornaments are subgroups of
the groups p4m and p6m generated by reflections (H.S.M. Coxeter,
W.O.J. Moser, 1980). Knowledge of group-subgroup relations between the
symmetry groups of ornaments makes possible the consequent application of
desymmetrizations. In ornamental art, this method appears in the Neolithic,
with the wider application of colors and decorative elements, to become in
time, along with the method of rosette and frieze multiplication, one of the
dominant construction methods.
Antisymmetry desymmetrizations originate from the use of colors in
ornamental art, beginning with Neolithic ceramics. Although colors, as an
artistic means, were used even in the Paleolithic, they were mainly used for
figurative contour drawings. Paleolithic ornaments mostly occur as stone and
bone engravings or drawings, so that antisymmetry desymmetrizations came to
their full expression with Neolithic colored, dichromatic ceramics. They can
serve as the basis for the derivation of all subgroups of the index 2 of a
given symmetry group. In cases when classical-symmetry desymmetrizations are
complex, this is the most fruitful method for the derivation of certain less
frequent symmetry groups of ornaments (cmm/pgg, pmg/
pg, p4m/p4g, pmg/pgg, p6m/p3m1,
p6m/p6), because the resulting symmetry groups (pgg, pg,
p4g, pgg, p3m1, p6) are derived by antisymmetry
desymmetrizations of the frequently used generating symmetry groups (
cmm, pmg, p4m, pmg, p6m, p6m).
The list of antisymmetry desymmetrizations of the symmetry groups of
ornaments, i.e. the list of antisymmetry groups of ornaments G2', can
serve as the basis for antisymmetry desymmetrizations. A survey of the
minimal indexes of subgroups in the symmetry groups of ornaments
(H.S.M. Coxeter, W.O.J. Moser, 1980, pp. 136), mosaics for dichromatic plane
groups (A.V. Shubnikov, N.V. Belov et al., 1964, pp. 220) and numerous
works on the theory of the antisymmetry of ornaments (H.J. Woods, 1935;
A.M. Zamorzaev, A.F. Palistrant, 1960, 1961;
A.V. Shubnikov, N.V. Belov et
al., 1964; A.M. Zamorzaev, 1976;
S.V. Jablan, 1986a) are some of the
possible sources for future consideration of antisymmetry
desymmetrizations.
In the table of antisymmetry desymmetrizations the antisymmetry
groups of ornaments G2' are given in the group/subgroup notation G/H
giving information on the generating symmetry group G and its subgroup H
of the index 2 obtained by the antisymmetry desymmetrization. Aiming to
differentiate between two antisymmetry groups possessing the same
group/subgroup symbol and to denote two different possible positions of
reflections in the symmetry group pm, the symbols pm1 and
p1m, are used.
The table of antisymmetry desymmetrizations of symmetry groups of ornaments
G2:
Antisymmetry and color-symmetry desymmetrizations are the very
efficient tools for finding all subgroups of the index N of a given
symmetry group. The complete list of group-subgroup relations between 17
discrete symmetry groups of ornaments G2 and the minimal indexes of
subgroups in groups are given in the monograph by H.S.M. Coxeter and
W.O.J. Moser (1980, pp. 136). From the table of color-symmetry
desymmetrizations we can conclude that [cm:cm] = 3 (pp. 182,
the color-symmetry desymmetrization cm/cm, N = 3) and [
cmm:cmm] = 3 (pp. 182, the color-symmetry
desymmetrization cmm/cmm/cm, N = 3). After
these corrections and the corrections: [pmg:pmg] = 2,
[p6:p6] = 3, already given by the authors in
the reprint of their monograph, this table reads as follows.
Because the construction of antisymmetry ornaments and the
application of antisymmetry desymmetrizations is followed by various
construction problems, their use in ornamental art is usually restricted
to the antisymmetry groups stated in the table listing the most frequent
antisymmetry desymmetrizations (pp. 172).
The use of color-symmetry desymmetrizations in ornamental art began
with Neolithic polychromatic ceramics, to reach its peak in the ornamental
art of the ancient civilizations (Egypt), in Roman floor mosaics and in
Moorish ornaments. When considering color-symmetry desymmetrizations one
should distinguish, as in antisymmetry desymmetrizations, two different
possibilities. In the first case the use of colors results in a
desymmetrization of the symmetry group of the ornament, but neither an
antisymmetry nor color-symmetry group is obtained. Although the color is a
means of such desymmetrization, this is, in fact, a classical-symmetry
desymmetrization, as opposed to real antisymmetry or color-symmetry
desymmetrizations resulting in antisymmetry and colored symmetry groups of
ornaments. Only those desymmetrizations resulting in antisymmetry or
color-symmetry groups of ornaments will be accepted and analyzed under the
term of antisymmetry or color-symmetry desymmetrizations, while all the
other desymmetrizations using colors only as a technical means, will be
discussed as classical-symmetry desymmetrizations.
In line with the principle of visual entropy - maximal
constructional and visual simplicity and maximal symmetry - from the point
of view of ornamental art, especially important will be color-symmetry
desymmetrizations of the maximal symmetry groups of the crystal
systems - desymmetrizations of Bravais lattices.
The discussion on color-symmetry desymmetrizations of the symmetry
groups of ornaments relied on the works of A.M. Zamorzaev, E.I. Galyarski,
A.F. Palistrant (1978), M. Senechal (1979),
A.F. Palistrant (1980a),
J.D. Jarratt, R.L.E. Schwarzenberger (1980),
R.L.E. Schwarzenberger (1984),
A.M. Zamorzaev, Yu.S. Karpova, A.P. Lungu, A.F. Palistrant (1986)
and the monograph by T.W. Wieting The Mathematical Theory of Chromatic Plane
Ornaments (1982). In this monograph the numbers of the color-symmetry
groups of ornaments for N £ 60 colors, the catalogue of the
color-symmetry groups of ornaments for N £ 8 colors and the colored
mosaics for N = 4 colors, are given.
Because of the large number of the color-symmetry groups of
ornaments, in the table of the color-symmetry desymmetrizations of the
symmetry groups of ornaments, the restriction N £ 8 is accepted. In
that way, the usual practical needs for the construction and analysis of
colored ornaments, where the number of colors N does not exceed 8, are
also satisfied. According to the definition of color-symmetry groups given
by R.L.E. Schwarzenberger (1984), all the color-symmetry groups discussed
require the even use of colors. The uneven use of colors or the use of
colors in a given ratio, e.g., 2:1:1, 4:2:1:1, 6:2:1, 6:3:1:1:1
(B. Grünbaum, Z. Grünbaum, G.C. Shephard, 1986),
which occur in ornamental art
and demand a special mathematical approach, represents an open research
field.
In the table of the color-symmetry desymmetrizations of the symmetry
groups of ornaments, by analogy to the corresponding tables of the
color-symmetry desymmetrizations of the symmetry groups of rosettes and
friezes, every color-symmetry group is denoted, for a fixed N, by a
symbol G/H/H1. For H = H1,
i.e. iff H is a normal subgroup of the
group G, such a symbol is reduced to the symbol G/H. If the first or the
second symbol does not uniquely determine the color-symmetry group, i.e.
the corresponding color-symmetry desymmetrization, such symbols
supplemented by the symbol of the translational group that corresponds to
the subgroup H, are used (D. Harker, 1981).
In the supplementary symbols
-a is denoted by
a, and the symbol of the
2×2 matrix with the colomns a, b and c, d
is [ab,cd]. The incidence of the symmetry element S of the
group G to the symmetry element S1 of the subgroup H is
denoted by the supplementary symbol (S º S1). To
differentiate between the symmetry groups pg with the glide
reflections gx, gy, the symbols pg1,
p1g are used respectively. The symbols cm1, c1m,
and pmg, pgm, are used analogously for denoting the
two different possible positions of the reflection m.
The table of color-symmetry desymmetrizations of symmetry groups of
ornaments G2:
Between the visually presentable continuous symmetry groups
of ornaments, the following group-subgroup relations hold (Figure 2.104).
These relations point out desymmetrizations suitable to derive continuous
symmetry groups of a lower degree of symmetry and to recognize symmetry
substructures of visually presentable plane continua and semicontinua.
Since all discrete symmetry groups of ornaments G2 are subgroups of the
symmetry groups p4m and p6m, for further work on group-subgroup
relations between the continuous and discrete symmetry groups of ornaments,
it is possible to use this data.
The geometric-algebraic properties of the symmetry groups of
ornaments G2 - their presentations, data on their structure, properties
of generators, polarity, non-polarity and bipolarity, enantiomorphism, form
of the fundamental region, tables of group-subgroup relations, Cayley
diagrams, etc. - offer the possibility to plan the visual properties of
ornaments before their construction. Besides the usual approach to
ornamental art, where visual structures serve as the objects for analyses
from the point of view of the theory of symmetry, there is also an opposite
approach - from abstract geometric-algebraic structures to the
anticipation of their visual properties. Then ornaments may be understood
as visual models of the corresponding symmetry groups.
Generators define a possible form of a fundamental region, so that
the incidence of a reflection line with a segment of the boundary of the
fundamental region means that such a part of the boundary must be
rectilinear. A fundamental region must be rectilinear in the symmetry
groups of ornaments generated by reflections - pmm, p3m1,
p4m, p6m. All the other symmetry groups of ornaments offer the use of
curvilinear boundaries or curvilinear parts of boundaries of a fundamental
region, which do not belong to reflection lines. The question of the form
of a fundamental region is directly linked to the perfect plane
forms - monohedral tilings, plane tilings by congruent tiles. This problem
constantly attracts mathematicians and artists (B. Grünbaum,
G.C. Shephard, 1987). In ornamental art it came to its fullest expression in
Egyptian and Moorish ornamental art and in the graphic works by M.C. Escher
(M.C. Escher, 1971a, b, 1986;
B. Ernst, 1976; C.H. Macgillavry,
1976) . For the symmetry groups of ornaments generated by
reflections pmm, p4m and p6m, the problem of
isohedral tilings is simply reduced to a rectangular lattice
(pmm) and regular tessellations {4,4} (p4m),
{3,6} or {6,3} (p6m). There is a certain
anomaly in the symmetry group p3m1 (D). Owing to
a symmetrization, its corresponding tessellation {3,6}
possesses the symmetry group p6m. Therefore, this is the
only symmetry group of ornaments not offering any possibility for
the corresponding isohedral unmarked tilings and requiring the
use of an asymmetric figure within a fundamental region, this
means, a marked tiling. This contradiction can be solved by
taking rotation centers always inside the tiles, so that the
symmetry group p3m1 will correspond to a regular
tessellation {3,6} , and the symmetry group p6m to a
regular tessellation {6,3} . Under such conditions the
symmetry group p3m1 belongs to the family of the symmetry
groups of ornaments appearing in Paleolithic ornamental art,
since the regular tessellation {3,6} dates from the
Paleolithic (Figure 2.92b).
A generating translation axis of an ornament is non-polar iff there
exists a reflection perpendicular to it. If a central reflection center
belongs to a translation axis, this axis will be bipolar, while in the other
cases that axis will be polar. There will be no enantiomorphic
modifications of an ornament iff its symmetry group contains indirect
isometries. A rotation of an ornament will be non-polar iff there exists a
reflection incident to the center of this rotation n
(n = 2, 3, 4, 6), i.e. iff the
corresponding dihedral group Dn (nm) is a subgroup
of the symmetry group of the ornament.
The visual stationariness of an ornament is conditioned by the
non-polarity of its axes and rotations, by the presence of reflections,
especially perpendicular ones, by the absence of glide reflections
suggesting alternating motions and by the absence of the enantiomorphism.
On the other hand, the factors that determine whether an ornament will be a
dynamic one in the visual sense, will be the polarity of translation axes
suggesting one-way directed motions, the polarity of rotations, the
presence of glide reflections, the absence of reflections and the existence
of the enantiomorphism.
Besides the stated objective geometric-visual elements defining
visual stationariness or dynamism of certain ornament, the "subjective"
elements are also important. By changing them, it is possible to influence
the visual impression that the ornament gives to the observer. Under these
changeable factors - the "visual parameters" of an ornament - we can
include the form of a fundamental region or the shape of an asymmetric
figure within a fundamental region. By changing this it is
possible to decrease or emphasize the visual dynamism. The use of
acuteangular forms in dynamic ornaments, the change of a position
of symmetry elements with respect to the observer and to the
fundamental natural directions, the visual role of the
äscending" and "descending" diagonal, etc., can have the same
function.
Real ornaments occurring in ornamental art are bounded parts of
"ideal" unbounded geometric ornaments, i.e. their finite factor groups,
derived by the identifications pxm = E,
pyn = E
(m, n Î N). Such a bounded part of an ornament is defined by the intensities of the
generating translations px, py, their mutual position and
by the parameters m, n. In ornaments with the px- and
py-translation vectors of the same intensity, especially interesting is
the case of m = n.
The visual effect given to the observer by a real ornament is the
result of the interaction between the symmetry group of the ornament, the
plane symmetry of the observer and binocularity, the symmetry of a bounded
part of the "ideal" ornament, symmetry of the environment, etc. It is also
formed under the visual-physiological influence of the fundamental natural
directions (the vertical and horizontal line, gravitation, etc.). All these
"subjective" factors participate in the formation of the primary visual
impression, as desymmetrization or symmetrization factors. Some of them
(e.g., the vertical and horizontal line), may occur as a specific implicit
coordinate system having a relevant positive or negative influence on the
recognition of the symmetry of ornament. In the further course of the
process of visual perception, the observer tends to recognize the symmetry
of the ornament itself. Even after the elimination of disturbing elements,
the eye often perceives a visually dominant structure, reducing it to the
simplest one possible. Sometimes, according to the principle of visual
entropy, the visual introduction of new symmetry elements - symmetrization
of the structure - and visual substitution of dynamic elements of symmetry
by their static equivalents takes its place. This is often manifested in
experiments to recognize or reproduce certain motifs.
One comes across similar problems during the visual perception of
symmetry substructures - rosettes, friezes or ornaments - belonging to
certain ornament. Their symmetry groups appear as the subgroups of the
symmetry group of the ornament. The primary factors relevant for the visual
perception of substructures will be the visual simplicity of substructures
themselves (their visual stationariness or dynamism), the degree of visual
simplicity of the ornament and the position of substructures with respect
to the fundamental directions of the ornament, to the fundamental natural
directions, etc.
Visually simpler, static non-polar forms with a high degree of
symmetry, occurring as substructures, will be more easily perceived and
visually recognized. The possibility for recognizing its symmetry
substructures will depend also on the visual simplicity of the ornament
itself. A high degree of symmetry of the ornament in such a case is the
aggravating factor for registering subentities, so that the same symmetry
subgroup will be easily recognized in ornaments with a low degree of
symmetry. For recognizing the symmetry of ornaments and their
substructures, it is very important to visually recognize and discern a
fundamental region or an elementary asymmetric figure belonging to the
fundamental region. Otherwise, a slow recognition of symmetry elements and
the symmetry group of the ornament, is unavoidable. Problems with the
recognition of symmetry substructures of one ornament can be efficiently
solved by using the table of subgroups of a given symmetry group of
ornaments, and especially, by using their visual interpretations
- tables of the graphic symbols of symmetry elements
(A.V. Shubnikov, V.A. Koptsik, 1974;
B. Grünbaum, G.C. Shephard, 1987)
and Cayley diagrams of ornaments
(H.S.M. Coxeter, W.O.J. Moser, 1980).
Visualization was an important element in the development of the
theory of symmetry of ornaments, so that the visual characteristics of
ornaments caused the occurrence of similar ideas, construction methods and
even a chronological parallelism between these fields. In ornamental art
and in the theory of symmetry the oldest methods for the construction of
ornaments, used the frieze and rosette multiplication, including the problem
of Bravais lattices, crystal systems and tessellations. The criteria of
maximal constructional and visual simplicity and maximal symmetry, united by
the principle of visual entropy, played the same important role in both
fields, where the symmetry structures with emphasized visual simplicity, in
which prevail static elements, were dominant. Considering dynamic
structures, mathematicians and artists were faced with the problem of
perceiving the regularities on which they were based, when defining the
elements of symmetry, generating and other symmetry substructures.
Throughout history, visuality was usually the cause and the basis
for geometric discussions. Only lately, with non-Euclidean geometries, have
the roles been partly replaced, so that visualization is becoming more and
more the way of modeling already existing theories. From a methodological
aspect, this is the evolution from the empirical-inductive to the deductive
approach. Similarly, we can note the way ornaments progressed from their
origin linked to concrete meanings - models in nature - or the symbolic
meanings of ornamental motifs. After their meaning and form were harmonized,
ornaments became a means of communication. In the final phase, after having
complete insight into the geometric and formal properties of ornaments, the
question of the meaning of ornaments is almost solved, but new
possibilities for artistic investigations of the variety and decorativeness
of ornaments, are opened.
This analysis of the visual properties of ornaments and their
connection with the symmetry of ornaments, points out the inseparability of
these two fields. Besides the possibility for the exact analysis of
ornaments, "the theory of symmetry approach" to ornamental art provides the
groundwork for planning, constructing and considering ornaments as visual
creations with desired visual properties. These visual properties can be
anticipated from the corresponding symmetry groups of ornaments,
their presentations, properties of generators, structures, etc.
Ornaments, treated as visual models of different symmetry
structures, can be the subject of scientific studies, and can be
used in all scientific fields requiring a visualization of such
symmetry structures.
p2/p2 pmm/cmm pmg/pm
cmm/cm pmg/pgg cmm/pmm
pmg/pmg p4/p4 p4m/p4g
p4m/p4m p6m/p3m1 p6m/p6
p1/p1 pmg/pmg p4g/p4
pmg/pgg p4g/cmm
p2/p2 pmg/pm p4g/pgg
p2/p1 pmg/pg
pmg/p2 p4m/p4m
pg/pg p4m/p4g
pg/p1 pmm/pmm p4m/p4
pmm/cmm p4m/cmm
pm/cm pmm/pmg p4m/pmm
pm/pm1 pmm/pm
pm/p1m pmm/p2 p3m1/p3
pm/pg
pm/p1 cmm/pmm p31m/p3
cmm/pmg
cm/pm cmm/pgg p6/p3
cm/pg cmm/cm
cm/p1 cmm/p2 p6m/p6
p6m/p31m
pgg/pg p4/p4 p6m/p3m1
pgg/p2 p4/p2
p1 p2 pg pm cm
pgg pmg pmm cmm p4
p4g p4m p3 p31m p3m1
p6 p6m
p1 2
p2 2 2
pg 2 2
pm 2 2 2 2
cm 2 2 2 3
pgg 4 2 2 3
pmg 4 2 2 2 4 2 2
pmm 4 2 4 2 4 4 2 2 2
cmm 4 2 4 4 2 2 2 2 3
p4 4 2 2
p4g 8 4 4 8 4 2 4 4 2 2 9
p4m 8 4 8 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2
p3 3 3
p31m 6 6 6 3 2 4 3
p3m1 6 6 6 3 2 3 4
p6 6 3 2 3
p6m 12 6 12 12 6
6 6 6
3 4 2 2 2 3
N=3
p1/p1 pm/pm/p1 pgg/pgg/pg
pm/pm
p2/p2/p1 p31m/cm/p1
pg/pg/p1 p31m/p3m1
p3/p1 pg/pg
p3/p3 p3m1/cm/p1
cmm/cmm/cm p3m1/p31m/p3
p6/p2
p6/p6/p3 pmm/pmm/pm
p6m/cmm/p2
p6m/p6m/p3m1
cm/cm/p1 pmg/pmg/pm
cm/cm pmg/pmg/pg
N=4
p1/p1[10,04] cmm/p1 pgg/p1
p1/p1[20,02] cmm/p2/p2 pgg/p2/p1
cmm/p2(mm º 2) pgg/p2
p2/p1 cmm/p2(2 º 2) pgg/pg/p1
p2/p2/p1 cmm/pm
p2/p2 cmm/pg p31m/p31m/p1
cmm/cmm/p2
p3/p3/p1 cmm/pmg/pg p3m1/p3m1/p1
cmm/pmm/pm
p4/p1 cmm/pgg/pg p4m/p2
p4/p2/p2 cmm/pmg/pm p4m/p4
p4/p2(4 º 2) p4m/cm/p1
p4/p2(2 º 2) pmm/p1 p4m/pm/p1
p4/p4/p2 pmm/p2[10,02] p4m/pmm
pmm/p2[11,
11] p4m/pgg
p6/p6/p2 pmm/pm[10,02]
p4m/pmg[11,
11]/p2
pmm/pm[20,01] p4m/pmg[10,02]/p2
cm/p1/p1 pmm/pg p4m/pmm/pmm
cm/p1 pmm/cm p4m/cmm
cm/cm/p1 pmm/pmm p4m/cmm/p2
cm/pm/p1 pmm/pgg p4m/p4m/pmm
cm/pg/p1 pmm/pmg p4m/p4g/pgg
cm/pm pmm/pmg/pg
cm/pg pmm/pmm/pm p4g/p2
pmm/cmm/cm p4g/p4/p2
pm/p1[10,02] p4g/cm/p1
pm/p1[20,01] pmg/p1 p4g/pg/p1
pm/p1[11,
11] pmg/p2 p4g/pmg/p2
pm/pm/p1 pmg/p2[20,01]/p1 p4g/pgg
pm/pm[20,02] pmg/
p2[11,
11]/p1 p4g/pmm
pm/pg[20,02] pmg/pm
pm/cm/p1 pmg/pg1 p6m/p3
pm/pm[40,01] pmg/pm/p1 p6m/p6m/p2
pm/pg[40,01] pmg/cm/p1
pm/cm pmg/p1g
pmg/pgg/pg
pg/p1[10,02] pmg/pmg/pm
pg/p1[20,01]
pg/p1[11,
11]
pg/pg/p1
N=5
p1/p1 pm/pm/p1 pmm/pmm/pm
pm/pm
p2/p2/p1 pmg/pmg/pm
pg/pg/p1 pmg/pmg/pg
p4/p4/p1 pg/pg
pgg/pgg/pg
cm/cm/p1 cmm/cmm/cm
cm/cm
N=6
p1/p1 pg/p1[10,03] pgg/p2[10,03]/p1
pg/p1[30,01] pgg/p2[2
1,11]/p1
p2/p1 pg/p1/p1 pgg/pg/p1
p2/p2/p1 pg/pg/p1 pgg/pg
pg/pg
p3/p1/p1 p31m/p1
cmm/p2[10,03]/p1 p31m/p3
p4/p2[10,03]/p1 cmm/p2[2
1,11]/p1 p31m/p3/p1
p4/p2[2
1,11]/p1 cmm/cm/p1 p31m/pm/p1
cmm/cm p31m/pg/p1
p6/p1 cmm/pmm/pm
p6/p2/p2 cmm/pgg/pg p3m1/p1
p6/p2/p1 cmm/pmg/pg p3m1/p3
p6/p3 cmm/pmg/pm p3m1/pm/p1
p6/p3/p1 p3m1/pg/p1
pmm/p2[10,03]/p1
cm/p1/p1 pmm/p2[2
1,11]/p1 p4m/cmm/p1
cm/p1[2
1,11] pmm/pm/p1 p4m/pmm/p1
cm/p1[21,
11] pmm/pm
cm/pm/p1 pmm/pmm[20,03]/pm p4g/cmm/p1
cm/pg/p1 pmm/pmg/pm p4g/pmm/p1
cm/pm pmm/pmg/pg
cm/pg pmm/pmm[10,06]/pm p6m/p2
pmm/cmm/cm p6m/p6/p3
pm/p1[10,03] p6m/cm1/p1
pm/p1[30,01] pmg/p2[10,03]/p1 p6m/c1m/p1
pm/p1/p1 pmg/p2[30,01]/p1 p6m/pmm/p2
pm/pm[10,06]/p1 pmg/p2[2
1,11]/p1 p6m/pgg/p2
pm/pm[20,03]/p1 pmg/pm p6m/pmg/p1
pm/pg/p1 pmg/pm/p1 p6m/pgm/p1
pm/cm/p1 pmg/pg/p1 p6m/p31m/p3
pm/pm[30,02] pmg/pg p6m/p31m/p1
pm/pm[60,01] pmg/pgg[10,06]/p1 p6m/p3m1
pm/pg pmg/pmg/pm
pm/cm pmg/pgg[30,02]/pg
pmg/pmg/pg
N=7
p1/p1 cm/cm/p1 cmm/cmm/cm
cm/cm
p2/p2/p1 pmm/pmm/pm
pm/pm/p1
p3/p3/p1 pm/pm pmg/pmg/pm
pmg/pmg/pg
p6/p6/p1 pg/pg/p1
pg/pg pgg/pgg/pg
N=8
p1/p1[10,08] cmm/p1/p1 pgg/p1[10,02]
p1/p1[20,04] cmm/p1 pgg/p1[11,
11]
cmm/p2(2 º 2) pgg/p2[20,02]/p1
p2/p1[10,04] cmm/p2(mm º 2) pgg/p2[10,04]/p1
p2/p1[20,02] cmm/p2[10,04]/p1 pgg/p2[2
2,11]/p1
p2/p2[10,08]/p1 cmm/p2[20,12]/p1 pgg/pg/p1
p2/p2[20,04]/p1 cmm/p2[2
2,11]/p1(mm º 2)
cmm/p2[2
2,11]/p1(2 º 2) p31m/p3/p1
p4/p1/p1 cmm/cm/p1
p4/p1 cmm/pm/p1 p3m1/p3/p1
p4/p2[20,02]/p1 cmm/pg/p1
p4/p2 cmm/pm p4m/p1
p4/p2[10,04]/p1 cmm/pg p4m/p2/p2
p4/p2[20,12]/p1 cmm/pmg/p1 p4m/p2(4m º 2)
p4/p2[2
2,11]/p1(4 º 2) cmm/pgg/p1 p4m/p2(2m º 2)
p4/p2[2
2,11]/p1(2 º 2) cmm/pmm/p1 p4m/p4/p2
p4/p4/p2 cmm/pmm/pm p4m/pm[11,
11]/p1
cmm/pmg/pg p4m/pg[11,
11]/p1
p6/p3/p1 cmm/pmg/pm p4m/pm[10,02]/p1
cmm/pgg/pg p4m/pm[20,01]/p1
cm/p1[20,02] p4m/pg[20,01]/p1
cm/p1[40,01]/p1 pmm/p1[10,02] p4m/cm/p1
cm/p1[2
2,11] pmm/p1[11,
11] p4m/cmm/p2
cm/p1[20,12]/p1 pmm/p2 p4m/pmg[2
2,11]/p1
cm/p1[22,
11] pmm/p2[10,04]/p1 p4m/pmm[2
2,11]/p1
cm/pg[22,
22]/p1 pmm/p2[20,12]/p1 p4m/pgg[2
2,11]/p1
cm/pm[22,
22]/p1 pmm/p2[2
2,11]/p1 p4m/pmg[2
2,11]/p1
cm/pm[4
4,11]/p1 pmm/pm/p1 p4m/pmm[20,02]/p1
cm/pg[4
4,11]/p1 pmm/pm[20,02] p4m/pmg[20,02]/p1
cm/cm[31,
22]/p1 pmm/pg[20,02] p4m/pgg[20,02]/p1
cm/cm[3
1,22]/p1 pmm/cm/p1 p4m/pmm
cm/pm pmm/pm[40,01] p4m/pgg
cm/pg pmm/pg[40,01] p4m/pmg[20,02]/p2
pmm/cm p4m/pmg[10,04]/pg
pm/p1[10,04] pmm/pmg[20,04]/pg p4m/pmm[10,04]/p1
pm/p1[20,02] pmm/pmm[20,04]/pm p4m/cmm/p1(2m º 2)
pm/p1[20,12] pmm/pgg/pg p4m/cmm/p1(4m º 2)
pm/p1[40,01] pmm/pmg/pm p4m/p4m/p1
pm/p1[21,02] pmm/cmm/p1 p4m/p4g/p1
pm/p1[2
2,11] pmm/pmg[10,08]/pg
pm/pm[10,08]/p1 pmm/pmm[10,08]/pm p4g/p1
pm/pm[20,04]/p1 pmm/cmm/cm p4g/p2/p1
pm/pg/p1 p4g/p2(4 º 2)
pm/cm[20,14]/p1 pmg/p1[10,02] p4g/p2(2 º 2)
pm/pm[40,02] pmg/p1[20,01] p4g/p4/p1
pm/pg[40,02] pmg/p1[11,
11] p4g/pg[11,
11]/p1
pm/cm[22,
22]/p1 pmg/p2[10,04]/p1 p4g/pm/p1
pm/pm[80,01] pmg/p2[11,
11]/p1 p4g/pg[10,02]/p1
pm/pg[80,01] pmg/p2[20,12]/p1 p4g/cmm/p1
pm/cm pmg/p2[40,01]/p1 p4g/pgg/p1
pmg/p2[21,02]/p1 p4g/pmg/p1(4 º 2)
pg/p1[10,04] pmg/p2[2
2,11]/p1 p4g/pmg/p1(2 º 2)
pg/p1[20,02] pmg/pm
pg/p1[20,12] pmg/pg p6m/p6/p2
pg/p1[40,01] pmg/pm[20,02]/p1 p6m/p3m1/p1
pg/p1[21,02] pmg/pg[11,
11]/p1 p6m/p31m/p1
pg/p1[2
2,11] pmg/cm[20,12]/p1
pg/pg/p1 pmg/pm[40,01]/p1
pmg/cm[21,02]/p1
pmg/pg[10,04]/p1
pmg/pgg/pg
pmg/pmg/pm
A homogeneous and isotropic plane possesses the maximal continuous
symmetry group of ornaments p00¥m (s¥¥),
while all the other symmetry groups of ornaments are its subgroups. In
ornamental art, it may be identified as a ground representing the
environment where the remaining symmetry groups of ornaments exist. Among
the symmetry groups of semicontinua, only the symmetry groups
p101m (s1m) and p10mm (smm) possess their
adequate visual interpretations. The condition for the visual
presentability of the continuous symmetry groups of ornaments is the
non-polarity of their continuous translations and continuous rotations. For
the symmetry groups of semicontinua this condition is equivalent to the
existence of the corresponding visually presentable continuous friezes, by
the translational multiplication of which the corresponding semicontinua
can be derived.
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