Can you see beyond the sea? (Image: Tanya Johnston Illustration & Design/Getty)
Video: See how tricky 3D shapes can deceive your eyes
The artist was renowned for creating drawings of imaginary spaces that could not exist in three dimensions. Or could they?
at Meiji University in Kawasaki, Japan, has been using computer software to bring impossible drawings to life. The video above shows some of the objects he has made moving in ways that appear to defy geometry.
When the models are turned around, however, the trick is revealed: the objects are not what they seem. That’s because we constantly make assumptions about perspective and depth in order to move about in a 3D world, and these models take advantage of those assumptions.
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Sugihara used computer software to analyse seemingly impossible drawings and come up with solid shapes that might look like the drawing from one perspective, but not from others.
It’s not the first time Sugihara has tricked 91av readers with his illusions. Earlier this year, the engineer won first prize in the 2010 Illusion of the Year contest in Naples, Florida.
And in June, 91av reported on a different approach to Escher-style illusions by at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Read more: Moving illusions: Brain-tricking motion



