M. C. Escher Gallery
The structure has seven stairways, and each stairway can be used by people who belong to two different gravity sources. This creates interesting phenomena, such as in the top stairway, where two inhabitants use the same stairway in the same direction and on the same side, but each using a different face of each step; thus, one descends the stairway as the other climbs it, even while moving in the same direction nearly side by side. In the other stairways, inhabitants are depicted as climbing the stairways upside-down, but based on their own gravity source, they are climbing normally.

Each of the three parks belongs to one of the gravity wells. All but one of the doors seem to lead to basements below the parks. Though physically possible, such basements are certainly unusual and add to the surreal effect of the picture.

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Dream (Mantis religiosa)
Stairs
Relativity
Paper Lizard
Relections

Biography


Bulletin Board


Renowned Art
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M.C. Escher (1898-1972)
M.C. Escher drew spatial illusions, impossible buildings and repeating geometric patterns known as tessellations. He also produced woodcuttings and lithographs
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