The human quest for discovering mathematical beauty in the arts
Stefano Balietti

TL;DR
This paper explores the human pursuit of discovering mathematical beauty in arts, highlighting recent advances enabled by digitization, computational power, and statistical methods across various art forms.
Contribution
It reviews how technological innovations have expanded the scope of computational aesthetics in uncovering hidden mathematical structures in art and culture.
Findings
Mathematical structures like the golden ratio are prevalent in art.
Computational methods reveal hidden patterns in large artistic datasets.
The field has expanded beyond visual arts to music, language, and equations.
Abstract
In the words of the twentieth-century British mathematician G. H. Hardy, "the human function is to 'discover or observe' mathematics" (1). For centuries, starting from the ancient Greeks, mankind has hunted for beauty and order in arts and in nature. This quest for mathematical beauty has led to the discovery of recurrent mathematical structures, such as the golden ratio, Fibonacci, and Lucas numbers, whose ubiquitous presences have been tantalizing the minds of artists and scientists alike. The captivation for this quest comes with high stakes. In fact, art is the definitive expression of human creativity, and its mathematical understanding would deliver us the keys for decoding human culture and its evolution (2). However, it was not until fairly recently that the scope and the scale of the human quest for mathematical beauty was radically expanded by the simultaneous confluence of…
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