13 items, 12ms

» Refine your search

theme: illusion.n.01



Artist Traits

Collections

Object Type

Object Sub Type

Classification

Decade Work Created

Artist Name

Region

Mentions Per Year

Untitled (blue)
© » KADIST

Chris Duncan

Painting (Painting)

Taken from the title of the incredibly influential punk/hardcore record I AGAINST I by the Bad Brains, Untitled (blue) is an acrylic painting on reflective paper by Chris Duncan is part of a larger body of work titled EYE AGAINST I . This title references Duncan’s early artistic influences from the punk and hardcore music communities in tandem with his conceptual interest in perception and optics. This small painting features a glowing cluster of colorful dots on a bright blue background, also created from an accumulation of blue dots in varying tones.

Untitled
© » KADIST

James Collins

Painting (Painting)

These two large format untitled paintings by James Collins feature the artist’s hallmark technique, which transforms abstraction into an optical illusion that creates dimension, space, and mass. These particular paintings expand on the optical illusion referred to as a moiré pattern. Moiré (or fringe patterns as they are also called) are known in mathematics, physics, and art as a type of interference pattern that can be produced when a partially opaque ruled pattern with transparent gaps is overlaid on another similar pattern.

Untitled 1 (Naked Routes)
© » KADIST

Em'kal Eyongakpa

Photography (Photography)

Em’kal Eyongakpa was born in Cameroon in 1981. After obtaining a postgraduate diploma in Botany and Ecology, he decided to concentrate exclusively on visual and sound art. His use of poetic, symbolic and surrealistic imagery is often sprinkled with paradoxes that challenge the obvious.

Untitled 1
© » KADIST

Pratchaya Phinthong

Photography (Photography)

Phinthong made four photographs depicting fragments of meteorites of which the faces have been polished to reflect the sky. Lying on the ground, on what appears to be woodland ground, the form of the meteorite disappears and the reflections of the clouds seems like a piercing of the ground.

Cosmovision V - VI - VII
© » KADIST

Rometti Costales

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The three cut-outs are made of three aerial photographs coming from the archives of the Ecuadorian Military Geographic Institute. These are views of the Amazon forest. The photographs are cut following an optical illusion pattern called “reversible cubes” or “tumbling blocks”, based on the Necker cube, a multistable object of psychophysics that is constantly switching perspectives.

Untitled 2
© » KADIST

Pratchaya Phinthong

Photography (Photography)

Phinthong made four photographs depicting fragments of meteorites of which the faces have been polished to reflect the sky. Lying on the ground, on what appears to be Woodland ground, the form of the meteorite disappears and the reflections of the clouds seems like a piercing of the ground.

You who are my love and my life’s enemy too
© » KADIST

Imran Qureshi

There was a tragedy in Sialkot, Punjab, in August 2010, when two adolescents were murdered by vigilantes who were apparently in connivance with the police. Struck by this blunder revealing police corruption, the started a series of paintings on paper, You who are my love and my life’s enemy too, in which he expressed his reaction to this murder. At first glance the work appears to be a splash of blood like the one in this killing, but, close up, the composition reveals itself as meticulous floral motifs typical of the art of miniature painting which the artist teaches.

Efficiency & Abyss #1
© » KADIST

Gabriel Pericas

Photography (Photography)

“Efficiency & Abyss 1” is part of a series of photographs of stacked chairs in an auditorium. The design of this chair makes stacking easy and rational. At the same time, this stack produces an optical effect that creates a shape resembling a tunnel or a subterranean passage.

Cluster Illusion
© » KADIST

Melvin Moti

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Cluster Illusion examines the brain’s tendency to recognize a pattern as something abstract. Rather than seeing the distinct dots of which the images are composed, our brains turn these dots into illusory clouds. This series is a study of human vision and a commentary on the human urge to find shapes and patterns in anything, giving coherence to the whole.

Adaptando la Carta #1, #2, #3, #4, #5
© » KADIST

Fabiola Torres-Alzaga

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Fabiola Torres-Alzaga plays with magic, illusion, and sleight-of-hand, fabricating installations, drawings, and films that toy with our perceptions. Her interests and the resulting aesthetic projects seem couched in the 19thcentury sideshow, more than the contemporary art world. In her delicate drawings, Adaptando la Carta, layers of tracing paper reveal different hand positions, concealing and revealing a playing card hidden among the curves of the magician’s hand.

Pratchaya Phinthong

Pratchaya Phintong’s works often arise from the confrontation between different social, economic, or geographical systems...

Melvin Moti

Scientific research, high and mass culture, and the processes of cultural production in contemporary society plays an important role in the work of Rotterdam-born artist Melvin Moti, currently based in Rotterdam and in Berlin...

Imran Qureshi

Pakistani artist Imran Qureshi’s practice revives 16th century Mughal miniature painting...

Gabriel Pericas

Gabriel Pericàs (b...

Fabiola Torres-Alzaga

Chris Duncan

Chris Duncan employs repetition and accumulation as a basis for experiments in visual and sound-based media...

Rometti Costales

Rometti Costales is an artistic collaboration between Julia Rometti and Victor Costales that began in 2007...

Em'kal Eyongakpa

Em’kal Eyongakpa was born in Cameroon in 1981...

James Collins

James Collins works with acrylic and oil to create the illusion of dimensionality in highly graphic paintings...

© » KADIST

about 112 months ago (03/01/2015)

© » KADIST

about 127 months ago (11/20/2013)

© » KADIST

about 181 months ago (06/18/2009)