Trompe l'Oeil →

Trompe l’oeil - A French term literally meaning “trick the eye.” Sometimes called illusionism, it’s a style of painting which gives the appearance of three-dimensional, or photographic realism. It flourished from the Renaissance onward. The discovery of linear perspective in fifteenth-century Italy and advancements in the science of optics in the seventeenth-century Netherlands enabled artists to render object and spaces with eye-fooling exactitude. Both playful and intellectually serious, trompe artists toy with spectators’ seeing to raise questions about the nature of art and perception.

This story originated in ancient Greece - Two painters were rivals in a contest. Each would try to make a picture that produced a more perfect illusion of the real world. One, named Zeuxis [ZOO-ziss], painted a likeness of grapes so natural that birds flew down to peck at them. Then his opponent, Parrhasius [pahr-HAY-zee-us] brought in his picture covered in a cloth. Reaching out to lift the curtain, Zeuxis was stunned to discover he had lost the contest. What had appeared to be a cloth was in reality his rival’s painting.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2009/05/26/article-1187338-0515336D000005DC-198_964x640.jpg

Astonishing 3D murals painted on the sides of buildings by a trompe l’oeil artist

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2009/05/26/article-1187338-05152E3F000005DC-725_964x621.jpg

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