De Artificiali Perspectiva
Monday, April 12, 2010 at 1:28AM
Nicholas Monsour in Art, De Artificiali Perspectiva, Film and Video, Optics, Stephen Quay, The Brothers Quay, Timothy Quay, or Anamorphosis

De Artificiali Perspectiva, or Anamorphosis (1991)

Directed by The Brothers Quay

 

Animation techniques are used to elucidate anamophosis, a method of depiction that uses the rules of perspective to systematically distort an image. When looked at from a different angle or in a curved mirror, the distorted image appears normal. Using animation of three-dimensional objects, the filmmakers demonstrate the basic effects of anamorphosis and reveal the hidden meanings that lurk within selected works of art, including a chair by Jean François Nicéron (c.1638), an anonymous painting of saints (c.1550), the fresco "Saint Francis of Paola" (1642) by Emmanuel Maignan in the cloister of Santa Trinità in Rome, and the painting "The Ambassadors" (1533) by Hans Holbein the younger.

 

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