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Although the distance between the moon and the earth does not vary, a moon that has just risen appears overly large. Although the red warning lights at a railway crossing are simply flashing on and off in alternation, they can appear to be moving. The world that we see is not necessarily the actual world before us. Are you seeing the world as it really is?
In the pre-Christian era, painters vied with one another to paint more realistically. Gaius Plinius Secundus (23-79AD), known as Pliny the Elder, a natural historian in Ancient Rome, relates the following anecdote in his work “Naturalis Historia.”*1
Water falls and the water wheel rotates. If we look at the channel to the right of the water wheel, it appears to be descending as the water flows away from the wheel. However, if we then look at the channel support struts, the water is falling from what we thought of as the channel's lowest pointthe end of the channel in fact appears to be its highest point.
All M.C.Escher works ©Escher Holding B.V. - Baarn - the
Netherlands. / Huis Ten Bosch - Japan
When competing with a rival painter named Parrhasios to decide who could paint more realistically, Zeuxis, a Greek artist, painted grapes that looked so real the birds came down to eat them. Believing that he had won, Zeuxis asked his competitor to draw back the curtain covering his own painting and reveal it. However, the curtain itself was the painting. Although his picture deceived the birds, his rival's painting deceived him, and Zeuxis conceded victory to Parrhasios.
A painting that captures reality precisely, as if it were right before your eyes, is called a “trompe l'il” (French for “deceive the eye”). There may be those who object to the use of the word “deceive;” however, it is our visual perception that is deceived by a trompe l'il and we take pleasure in this when we realize we have been fooled. A trompe l'il is thus a work of humor.
Active in the early part of the twentieth century, M.C. Escher (1898-1972) was probably the most well-known of artists who were fascinated by the wonder of visual perception. Escher was consumed with the depiction of regularity, continuity, and depth of space. He described the process of drawing his amazing world as he always draws, imagining he is creating the world's most beautiful thing.
The wonder of seeing is steeped in romance. There are many cases in which our visual perception is fooled and sometimes even modern science cannot explain why things appear as they do. Are we really then seeing the world in its true form?
The point where the fibers of the optic nerve bunch together, where it is impossible to form an image of what is seen, is known as “the blind spot.”
This illusion consists of two sets of concentric circles, which are designed to appear to rotate. The direction of rotation is from black to gray and from white to gray. Two images are used in order to exploit the viewer's natural tendency to look from one to the other alternately, making it easier for an optical illusion to occur.