History Of Optical Illusion
A Famous Illusion
Back in 1915, a cartoonist named W.E. Hill first published this drawing. It's hard to see what it's supposed to be.
Is it a drawing of a pretty young girl looking away from us? Or is it an older woman looking down at the floor?
Well, it's both. The key is perception and what you expect to see.

This simple line drawing is titled, "Mother, Father, and daughter" (Fisher, 1968) because it contains the faces of all three people in the title.
How many faces can you find?
Optical Art is a mathematically-oriented form of (usually) Abstract art, which uses repetition of simple forms and colors to create vibrating effects, moiré patterns, an exaggerated sense of depth, foreground-background confusion, and other visual effects.
In a sense all painting is based on tricks of visual perception: using rules of perspective to give the illusion of three-dimensional space, mixing colors to give the impression of light and shadow, and so on. With Optical Art, the rules that the eye applies to makes sense of a visual image are themselves the "subject" of the artwork.
In the mid-20th century, artists such as Josef Albers, Victor Vasarely, and M.C. Escher experimented with Optical Art. Escher's work, although not abstract, also deals extensively with various forms of visual tricks and paradoxes.
In the 1960's, the term "Op Art" was coined to describe the work of a growing group of abstract painters. This movement was led by Vasarely and Bridget Riley. Other Op Artists included Richard Anuszkiewicz, Jesús-Rafael Soto, Kenneth Noland, François Morellet, and Lawrence Poons.
Both of these antique optical illusions will trick your eyes into seeing a ghost-like floating head. Read the instructions for each and you will be "seeing things" in no time.

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