Deftly creating
dynamic illusions of depth and space on a two - dimensional surface, Grotjhan makes reference to various points in the history of painting, from Renaissance linear perspective, to the utopian shapes and visions of early 20th century Russian Constructivism, to the hallucinatory images of 1960s Op Art.
Not exact matches
Amazon calls the technology
Dynamic Perspective, with a 3D effect that adds the
illusion of depth behind the screen, rather than outward.
John Bunker: I wouldn't necessarily say an
illusion of sense
of depth, I would say a
dynamic interpenetration
of shapes...