Toine Heuvelmans submitted this original art: "Hi, I noticed on your great mighty optical illusions blog a number of trompe l'oeil, and remembered an exposition in Holland of the work of Cornelius Gijsbrechts. This Dutch painter was specialized in painting very realistic. He used this to paint for example "the back of a painting". If you see the painting yourself (not too close, you need a little distance not to see the paint), you really want to turn it around to see if there's a real painting on the other side. The exposition was called "ogen bedrogen", that's dutch for "eyes deceived". I added two screenshots for you, but do google around on his name. Enjoy, and keep up the good work!"
yay first haha. well. i am utterly confused... i don't get it at all. hm. is it just me?
bean
wowww thats pretty good!! i didnt understand it when i saw it but then i read the article. very smart i must say :D
Anonymous
It's not really an optical illusion in the strictest sense. It's a painting trying to make you think you're looking at the back of a painting, it's supposed to be easy to think it's actually a painting that's been turned around. I think it works better in person.
Anonymous
hmmm, confused....
Anonymous
Emily with paintings this clever there is no need for the illusion to be all singing all dancing .
Anonymous
nah, it's cool emily, i don't get it either.
Anonymous
that stuff is painted. he was a really good painter.
Anonymous
i dont get it either..............................
loser
i dont get it ether =^.^=
Anonymous
I don't get it either..
Anonymous
The pictures are painted, that's the illusion. What great skill.
Yes Emily I sorry to say it is you. You see the painting is a painting of the back of a painting and that's the illusion. You know, the painting back is really the painting front. No wait, the painting front is really the ............... nevermind. Now I'm confused Emily!!!
wierd, in the seond one i think i see a sad face looking to the left, made by the curtain. but in the first one, there doesnt seem to be anything, although i did tilt my screen sideways and i though i say a childrens drawing of a girl in a dress... i think i'm crazy, can anybody second that?
Anonymous
Yes you are crazy " a stump. I second that.Yes i see the face in the curtain. i think you made me crazy too
Mike Jones
For all of you who don't get it, it's really not that hard. All you have to do is read the little blurb above the two paintings. If you still don't get it: Imagine going into an art gallery and turning a painting around so you see the back of the painting. It would just be a wood frame and a black palate. The pretty frame would only be on the front side, and the picture would only be on the front side. So what this painter did, was paint what the back of a real painting would look like. So when you see the painting in a gallery, it looks like the pretty side is facing the wall. When in fact it's meant to look like it's backwards. That's the trick. That you think you're looking at the back of a framed painting, but the painter really just painted what the back would look like on the front.
o man, thats gangsta. but not as gangsta as yogurt... mmm yogurt.
Anonymous
Hey mike, or confused #2 how can i say this simple for u simple ppl? oh i got it... ITS A PAINTING clear enough for ya?
Anonymous
These are very good. I don't know if they're by the same artist, but I've seen different ones like this: a violin on the back of a door, a door opening onto an entire other room, stuff like that.
The detail on the pages in the second one! Makes me feel inadequete. He must have spent ages on these.
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yay first haha. well. i am utterly confused... i don't get it at all. hm. is it just me?
wowww thats pretty good!! i didnt understand it when i saw it but then i read the article. very smart i must say :D
It's not really an optical illusion in the strictest sense. It's a painting trying to make you think you're looking at the back of a painting, it's supposed to be easy to think it's actually a painting that's been turned around. I think it works better in person.
hmmm, confused....
Emily with paintings this clever there is no need for the illusion to be all singing all dancing .
nah, it's cool emily, i don't get it either.
that stuff is painted. he was a really good painter.
i dont get it either..............................
i dont get it ether
=^.^=
I don't get it either..
The pictures are painted, that's the illusion. What great skill.
wooooooow ....dont get it
Yes Emily I sorry to say it is you. You see the painting is a painting of the back of a painting and that's the illusion. You know, the painting back is really the painting front. No wait, the painting front is really the ............... nevermind. Now I'm confused Emily!!!
wierd, in the seond one i think i see a sad face looking to the left, made by the curtain. but in the first one, there doesnt seem to be anything, although i did tilt my screen sideways and i though i say a childrens drawing of a girl in a dress... i think i'm crazy, can anybody second that?
Yes you are crazy " a stump. I second that.Yes i see the face in the curtain. i think you made me crazy too
For all of you who don't get it, it's really not that hard. All you have to do is read the little blurb above the two paintings. If you still don't get it: Imagine going into an art gallery and turning a painting around so you see the back of the painting. It would just be a wood frame and a black palate. The pretty frame would only be on the front side, and the picture would only be on the front side. So what this painter did, was paint what the back of a real painting would look like. So when you see the painting in a gallery, it looks like the pretty side is facing the wall. When in fact it's meant to look like it's backwards. That's the trick. That you think you're looking at the back of a framed painting, but the painter really just painted what the back would look like on the front.
o man, thats gangsta. but not as gangsta as yogurt... mmm yogurt.
Hey mike, or confused #2 how can i say this simple for u simple ppl? oh i got it... ITS A PAINTING clear enough for ya?
These are very good. I don't know if they're by the same artist, but I've seen different ones like this: a violin on the back of a door, a door opening onto an entire other room, stuff like that.
The detail on the pages in the second one! Makes me feel inadequete. He must have spent ages on these.