Abstract

Pictorial art is typically viewed with two eyes, but it is not binocular in the sense that it requires two eyes to appreciate the art. Two-dimensional representational art works allude to depth that they do not contain, and a variety of stratagems is enlisted to convey the impression that surfaces on the picture plane are at different distances from the viewer. With the invention of the stereoscope by Wheatstone in the 1830s, it was possible to produce two pictures with defined horizontal disparities between them to create a novel impression of depth. Stereoscopy and photography were made public at about the same time and their marriage was soon cemented; most stereoscopic art is now photographic. Wheatstone sought to examine stereoscopic depth without monocular pictorial cues. He was unable to do this, but it was achieved a century later by Julesz with random-dot stereograms The early history of non-photographic stereoscopic art is described as well as reference to some contemporary works. Novel stereograms employing a wider variety of carrier patterns than random dots are presented as anaglyphs; they show modulations of pictorial surface depths as well as inclusions within a binocular picture.

Highlights

  • Pictorial art is typically viewed with two eyes, but it is not binocular in the sense that it requires two eyes to appreciate the art

  • The situation was summarised by Brewster: The photographic camera is the only means by which living persons and statues can be represented by means of two plane pictures to be combined by means of the stereoscope; and but for the art of photography, this instrument would have had a very limited application. (1856, p. 135)

  • The first stereoscopes were based on mirrors, prisms, or lenses (Brewster, 1849b; Wheatstone, 1838, 1852), but other systems for separating the images presented to each eye were enlisted

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Summary

Introduction

Pictorial art is typically viewed with two eyes, but it is not binocular in the sense that it requires two eyes to appreciate the art. Stereoscopic art, photography, graphics, random-dot stereograms, binocular vision, Wheatstone, Julesz, Dali Anaglyphs are displays in which the left and right eye images are printed in different colours, such as red and cyan, and they are viewed through filters of the same colours.

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