Do not attach a google drive or dropbox link.ģ) Include your information in the format requested (see below).Ĥ) Format Request: “Title” by Your Name | Camera + Film, Process - Your URL Deadline for Submissions is December 31st, 2022Ģ) Images must be 1500px on the shortest side at 72dpi.ģ) No photo-shopped borders or watermarks.ĥ) Image must be named in the following format: “FirstNameLastName1.jpg”, etc.ġ) The subject line of your email should state: "Submission: Art of Illusion”Ģ) Please ATTACH your images to the email NOT INSIDE the email. Photomontage, collage, assemblage, mixed media––any analog technique that breathes depth, texture, and breadth into imagery, asking viewers to question what is real and what is a figment of imagination. It makes us pause, look twice, and visualize the flat surface as an entryway into another dimension.įor the January 2023 Art of Illusion exhibition, I’m looking for photographic works that move viewers from 2D to 3D worlds, that capture the space in between what is on the surface, and what we dream coming to life. But from across the street the door beckons us into honeyed light. There is a mural in East Liverpool, Ohio painted on the side of an old department-store building depicting an open door that, up close, looks like a door that leads into a blank wall. Prompt: Trompe-l’oeil: a trick of the eye, an illusion that makes a two-dimensional space appear three-dimensional, as if there are objects or beings climbing out of artworks, longing to become part of our own. The best of these images will be showcased in an online show, beginning January 13th, 2022. To enter, all you need to do is read and respond to the following prompt with your analog photography. I would love to play around on this interactive illusion! Alas! I don’t see myself making it to the Jing An Kerry Centre in Shanghai, China any time soon, so it looks like I’m a bit out of luck.We are excited to announce that our January 2023 online group exhibition, “Art of Illusion,” is being curated by independent artist and copy editor for Analog Forever Magazine, Lisa Toboz! They can sit, crawl, stand, and lay down on the building facade and look up to see themselves in the mirror. This interactive building illusion, constructed by Argentinean architect Leandro Erlich, allows people to get an interesting perspective of themselves. It’s nothing more than a mock building facade created on the ground, and a huge mirror is placed above the building facade at a 45 degree angle. But is it really? Let’s check out another picture…Īre things starting to become a little clearer to you now? If not, this next image should completely give away the secret behind (or rather in front of) this awesome building illusion…ĭo you understand now? The “building” in this building illusion isn’t a building at all. Now this is a strange building illusion! People seem to be falling, crawling, and hanging all over the front of this building! Seems a little dangerous if you ask me. I’m not really sure why people are sitting on their window ledges, but hey-to each their own, right? But, things start to get weirder from here… This first image really isn’t that strange. You might even be able to figure it out on your own before I reveal the spoiler pictures at the end of the post. There’s not really much explaining this building illusion yet, so I’ll just have to show you and take it from there. There’s a good chance that what I’m about to show you will blow your mind! It’s a pretty awesome building illusions that, if you don’t know how it was done, will leave you wondering!
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