• Illusion of Motion artists have aimed to catch and simulate motion and to create the illusion of movement in their work.
  • Op Art took advantage of how our eyes see things to make paintings that seem to move. After looking at such an image, you see collors and patterns that begin to buldge, buckle, swell, and retreat.
  • Kinaesthetic artists also depicts movement, as some create artworks that can actually move
  • Moving images or films are the results of artist's attempts to recreate real movement

W.H. Brown, Bareback Riders, 1886

A circus painting by an American naive artist portrays an almost static illusion of movement

Monica Karpinnen, Vibration (metalic movement), 2006

Edward Muybridge, The Horse in Motion, 1878

was a photographer, and the first to develop photographic sequences of moving objects 

 Victor Vasarely, Vega Nor,1969 - Op Art

Alexander Calder, "the sculptor who made sculptures move",  Crinkly avec disc Rouge 1973 - Kinaesthetic art

 
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