Here is an interesting photograph. This photo was not manipulated with Photoshop or any other photo manipulation software.
How is this illusory effect accomplished?

Optical illusions
Flickr Artist: zm
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Here is an interesting photograph. This photo was not manipulated with Photoshop or any other photo manipulation software.
How is this illusory effect accomplished?
Tim Noble and Sue Webster. Partners in both life and art, Tim Noble (1966) and Sue Webster (1967) explore the toxic influences of consumer culture through new modes of portraiture. Turning garbage into complex and visually arresting sculptural installations, Noble and Webster exploit, manipulate and transform base materials, often using self-portraiture to undermine the “celebrated” authorship of the artist.
"Tim Noble and Sue Webster’s aptly titled exhibition, “Modern Art is Dead,” is an irreverent version of a shadowy Plato's Cave. Riding on the wake of their successful solo exhibition at P.S.1 in New York, the naughty couple continue to astound audiences with their transgressive alchemy of light, shadow -- and scraps of steel!I loved the skill needed to create these fascinating shadow self-portraits. They obviously are very passionate about their art. But they don't just do shadow illusions here is a word illusion very much like the one in this post.
In the bawdily titled The Crack, we enter a dark room where an assemblage of welded steel scraps stands in the middle of the gallery like a lonely Giacometti figure.
A light source in front of the sculpture casts a halo of light -- and a crack-like shadow -- against the wall behind it.
Tim Noble and Sue Webster
The Crack ©2004
(installation view)
Modern Art, London
Initially confounding (most tend to see the shadow as a positive space) we realize that the shadow is the negative space between two standing nude figures facing each other -- self-portraits by Noble and Webster.
The main work in the show, HE/SHE, is far more explicit -- there's no hiding in the shadowy crevices.
Two modernist-looking steel sculptures produce distinct silhouettes of the artists -- taking a piss! Could this be the artist’s commentary on modernism, a metaphorical marking of art turf?
Tim Noble and Sue Webster
HE/SHE ©2003
(installation view)
Modern Art, London
These are the results of my scanned body parts. I do have to blur a body part, I'm not that exhibitionist . If these pictures are inappropriate somebody has to tell me. Can this count as a nude picture? which is currently the highest score in my survey posted here, I am hoping to post more drawings than a nude picture.Euian this is an interesting compilation you put together. Well Done!
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