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Robert Dixon (mathematician)
British mathematician and graphic artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Robert Dixon (born 1947) is a British mathematician and graphic artist, known primarily for his book Mathographics[1] and for his plagiarism dispute with Damien Hirst.[2] Dixon was a research associate at the Royal College of Art.
He complained in 2004 that a circular pattern Hirst produced for a children's colouring book was a copy of one of his works.[2] In 2006, Dixon said that Hirst's print Valium had "unmistakable similarities" to one of his own designs. Hirst's manager contested this by explaining the origin of Hirst's piece was from a book The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry (1991)—not realising this was one place where Dixon's design had been published.[3][4]
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