Sentences with phrase «illusion of motion»

We like the sunken square box in the middle of the table, added for storage, which gives the table an almost whirlpool - like illusion of motion.
This expansion evokes the illusion of motion, making the patients feel as though «they've just gotten off a merry - go - round,» Minor says.
More impressive still, they may even have invented animation, using discs of bone to create the illusion of motion, much like a modern flip book.
It creates the illusion of motion, so it automatically ups the interesting factor by mixing things up.
SG: Cinema is the art of making images or images in motion, or the illusion of motion, so the self - reflexivity of films at this year's festival seems really high.
The use of equipment that could display animated images in rapid succession to create the illusion of motion is a more modern phenomenon that gained wide popularity with the development of motion pictures.
Cecily Brown explores youth and transience in kaleidoscopic compositions of fleshy, abstracted figures, utilizing the materiality of paint to replicate physical sensation and the illusion of motion.
Immediately to the right of the large house, spots of color multiply into chaos — and even the illusion of motion.
This process, along with color interaction creates the illusion of motion in the water.
The cumulative effect of these perceptual qualities recalls lenticular printing techniques that rely on offsetting layers to create the illusion of motion on a static surface.
Films unfold in time, and the illusion of motion in film becomes visible through the continuous projection of still images by a beam of light onto a screen.
Following the «steps», up and down, in this ambiguous space, the folded forms appear to flip forwards and backwards, sometimes creating the illusion of motion.
Her preferred spatial effect often seemed to be a swirling vortex, with the illusion of motion both countered and underscored by weighty colors and thick surfaces subdued with the active workings of a palette knife.
The static photographs, that are the base of the works, are played back in rapid succession giving the illusion of motion.
It has something to do, I think, with trying to increase the definition of the images while still creating the illusion of motion, ordinarily enhanced, I gather, by blurriness.
It's easy to say but harder to understand, because the illusion of motion derived from a series of still images results from really complex events in the eye and brain.
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