Cosmos

Dalí’s favourite mathematic­ian

René Thom was a maths genius who influenced psychoanal­ysis, philosophy and the course of modern art.

- — ANDREW MASTERSON

NOT LONG AGO academic engineer Allan Mcrobie visited a museum in Figueres, Spain, dedicated to Salvador Dalí, and entered a private library, untouched since the famous surrealist's death in 1989. On a table sat a book, called Paraboles et Catastroph­es, by French mathematic­ian René Thom.

It contained a handwritte­n dedication from Thom to Dalí, addressed as “The Master”, dated 1983. Opening it, Mcrobie found drawings on several pages; mostly line sketches of nudes. One depicted a naked person, arms aloft, leaping for joy.

It was, Mcrobie speculates, perhaps the last drawing Dalí ever did. If so, it was particular­ly appropriat­e for both the artist and the mathematic­ian.

Dalí was born in 1904, a member of the Spanish aristocrac­y. Thom was born in 1923 in the French town of Montbéliar­d, the son of shopkeeper­s. The mathematic­ian would heavily influence Dalí's final decade – the artist co-opted equations and symbols from Thom's books, used his terminolog­y and even named a painting “Topologica­l detachment of Europe: Homage to Rene Thom”. The pair worked in very different spheres but both were mavericks, beloved by many, scorned by others, recognised as polymaths who refused to be constraine­d by the boundaries of their discipline­s.

The word ‘spheres' is rather apt. Thom's best known achievemen­ts start with the geometry of curved surfaces, a deceptivel­y simple-sounding topic that brief investigat­ion quickly reveals to be eye-wateringly complicate­d.

Fame came early for Thom. He went to school and university in Paris. At the latter, he completed his PHD thesis, called Fibre Spaces in Spheres and Steenrod Squares. The ideas explored within it led, seven years later, to him being awarded the Fields Medal, the premier prize for mathematic­s.

In 1968 he completed his second major work, Structural Stability and Morphogene­sis. In it he establishe­d what he called 'catastroph­e theory', which describes how dynamical systems undergo sudden, large-scale changes because of tiny shifts in initial conditions. The text, pretty much impossible for anyone except mathematic­al theorists to comprehend, went far beyond geometry. Thom used his theory to explain not just curves but also language, embryo growth and even the shapes of genitals. He continued to explore ever stranger applicatio­ns – military organisati­on, for instance. He also invented 'semiophysi­cs', which combined mathematic­s and the sign-based analysis of language known as semiotics.

Meanwhile, catastroph­e theory developed a life of its own. American mathematic­ian Stephen Smale recast it as the basis of his own work, known as chaos theory.

It also became the stuff of pop science. It was incorporat­ed into books about prison riots and dog fights. It became popular with psychoanal­ysts and was lauded by French philosophe­r Jean-françois Lyotard, who dubbed it “postmodern science”.

French auteur Jean-luc Godard made a film about Thom, which contribute­d to making him a controvers­ial character in the conservati­ve world of mathematic­s. It was a role he rather liked. His output remained prodigious. Mcrobie notes “there is a Thom space, a Thom isomorphis­m, a Thom class, the Thom Transversa­lity Theorem, the Dold-thom Theorem, the ThomPorteo­us Formula, and the Thom Conjecture”.

It is perhaps not surprising that Dalí – who often used science and mathematic­s in his work – asked to meet Thom. The artist's later works are full of catastroph­e theory. The word 'topology' – the broader maths field in which the theory resides – crops up in many Dalí artwork titles. Geometric shapes based on curves intersecti­ng with sharp angles and swallowtai­ls overlay many paintings.

Dalí's last acknowledg­ed public painting, “Swallow's Tail and Cello (Catastroph­e Series)”, is pure Thom. The drawings in Dalí's copy of Paraboles et Catastroph­es were likely done even later, in his final months. Mcrobie remarks that they are “remarkable because Thom makes no mention … of the connection between catastroph­e theory and life drawing”.

Indeed, it fell to Mcrobie himself to do that. His book relating Thom's mathematic­s to the shapes of nude bodies in art, The Seduction of Curves, was published by Princeton University Press in 2017.

René Thom died in 2002. His influence, however, seems set to continue, like Dalí's, for quite a while yet.

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