
Herman Goldstine, reference photo and archival photo
Herman Goldstine in 1999 and in 1952 at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey standing with J. Robert Oppenheimer, John von Neumann and Julian Bigelow.
Herman Goldstine, reference photo and archival photo

595 Herman Goldstine
In the foreground of the portrait is a processor from the original ENEAC computer that Herman assisted in designing and programming during the Second World War. The frame of the portrait is modeled on the marvelous frame that Thomas Eakins designed for his portrait of Professor Henry Rolands. Herman made his most important contributions as a mathematician. He and John Von Neuman are widely regarded as the principal inventors of the logic system that forms the basis of the modern digital computer. I wanted to find a way to make the mental life of the mathematician part of the portrait. I asked Herman to lend me some of his original working notebooks. I photographed various pages from the notebooks, projected the images onto the frame, and incised Herman's scribbled notations and equations into the surface with an engraving tool before finishing the whole with gold leaf.- JRF
595 Herman Goldstine

585 Herman Goldstine, study
Charcoal and pastel on paper. 25.5 x 19.625 inches 1999585 Herman Goldstine, study

Herman Goldstine Composition Study
Charcoal and collage on paper. 46 x 30 inches 1999Herman Goldstine Composition Study

Herman Goldstine, Preliminary Study
Oil on paper. 27 x 27 inches 1999Herman Goldstine, Preliminary Study

180401 Herman Goldstine (595), %22In the Footsteps of Franklin%22-2
Installation view from the exhibition "In Franklin's Footsteps: 275 Years at the American Philosophical Society" April 13 to December 30 2018