Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

The Signature of God Mystery Cubes Series

The Signature of God 1

Mystery Cubes Series



The Mathematics and Mystery of The Signature of God

The Signature of God is the name of God in Aramaic.
The name of God once written cannot be erased.

This is the ultimate from my Mystery Cubes Series in painting, digital art and NFT.

The geometry and symmetry of The Signature of God

The construction of the 144ft monument of The Signature of God.

Read Revelation 7:1-12
144÷6=24
24÷6=4
4 angels standing at the 4 corners of the Earth holding the 4 winds.

As we know the following facts:

Cubes appear in Abrahamic religions. The Kaaba (Arabic for 'cube') in Mecca is one example. Cubes also appear in Judaism as tefillin, and the New Jerusalem is described in the New Testament as a cube.
Why?

Lateral Surface Area of Cube (LSA) = 4a2

LSA = 4 × (6)2

= 4 × 36

= 144 m2

Hence, the length of the diagonal is 6√3 m, and its lateral surface area is 144 square meters.

Cube shape is one of the fundamental shapes of mathematics and is observed very often in our daily lives. We can assume the cube is a polyhedron with equal length, breadth, and height. It can be easily stacked on one over another without leaving any spaces. We say about a cube that,

It has Twelve (12) Edges
It has Six (6) Faces
It has Eight (8) Vertices

We see various types of figures in our daily life that are shaped like cubes that include, boxes, ice cubes, sugar cubes, etc.

https://nigeriansreportng.blogspot.com/2023/09/the-signature-of-god.html




by Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima,
whose artworks have been exhibited in Nigeria and Japan since 1983 and co-curator of the first Art Against AIDS exhibitions at the National Museum and National Arts Theatre in Lagos in 1993 featuring his mentor, the famous printmaker and sculptor, Prof. Bruce Onobraekpeya and other Nigerian artists, including himself.

#God
#signature
#cubes
#art
#artworks
#artists
#religion
#faith
#mystery
#exhibition
#curator
#sculptor
#printmaker
#onobraekpeya
#bruce
#mentor
#museum
#nigeria
#japan

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Pan African Telecommunications Museum

Dear Publishers and Editors,

We the African Council for Arts & Culture (AFCAC) are a registered Panafrican cultural development organisation based in Germany.

To help commemorate the development of telecommunications in Africa, we are promoting the PAN AFRICAN TELECOMMUNICATIONS MUSEUM (PATM). This museum will showcase the development of wireless communication in Africa from the talking drum to the latest device.

There shall also be permanent and temporary exhibitions with crowd-pulling effects in the museum facilities.
Stakeholders of the African Information and Communications Technology (ICT) sectors who become members of the Pan African Telecommunications Museum will have space to exhibit their brands for as long as they remain members.

Apart from the African ICT stakeholders, membership of the PATM is open to any natural or legal person in singular and plural interested in the advancement of Appropriate Technology, Arts, Culture, Heritage and Social Responsibility.

African cities of the member states of the African Union invited to apply for the hosting of the museum and members will vote for the best candidate city.

To give the cities within your target groups a chance to apply we shall very thankful if you kindly publish the attached press release in your respectful medium (downloadable from: http://www.africac.org/PanafricanTelecommunicationsMuseum.html).


Do not hesitate to contact us for clarifications and details:

Yours sincerely,

Bubacarr Sankanu
African Council for Arts and Culture (AFCAC)
Pan African Telecommunications Museum
Postfach 800144
D-51001 Cologne, Germany

Tel.: 0049152-0444-246
Fax: 0049221-9646-412
Emails:princebubacarrstm@africac.org [mailto:princebubacarrstm@africac.org]
secretariat@africac.org [mailto:secretariat@africac.org]
Site:http://www.africac.org/PanafricanTelecommunicationsMuseum.html