Does your eye really see what is actually there? Although
you are sure it does, maybe not. Trompe l'œil is an art technique that uses realistic imagery to
create optical illusions that the objects or landscapes depicted are three
dimensional. Many of them actually exist on a flat surface, however. (You may
have seen this in some sidewalk murals.) Dating from before the Baroque period,
murals from Greek and Roman times were known to exist in places such as
Pompeii, where a typical trompe l'œil mural might depict a window, door, or
hallway, intended to suggest a much larger room. There is an old Greek story
that purports a contest between two renowned painters: Zeuxis (born around 464
BC) and Parrhasius, a rival artist. Zeuxis produced a still life painting so
convincing that birds flew down to peck at the painted grapes. Parrhasius asked
Zeuxis to judge one of his (Parhasius’) paintings that was behind a pair of
tattered curtains in his study. Parrhasius asked Zeuxis to pull back the
curtains, but when Zeuxis tried, he could not, because the curtains were
Parrhasius’s painting. Of course, that made Parrhasius the winner. More
tomorrow.
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