Have You Ever Wondered How Different Will Famous Works Of Art Look When The Characters In Them Wear Glasses?
as an optometrist and a self-taught graphic designer in my free time, I always wondered how wearing glasses changes how we perceive the character of the person in front of us, so I started with a small project called “Glasses changes people!”
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Vincent van Gogh – Self-Portrait, September 1889 Oil on canvas, Musée d’Orsay, Paris.
Grant DeVolson Wood – American Gothic, 1930 Oil on beaver board, Art Institute of Chicago
Johannes Vermeer – The Girl With The Pearl Earring , 1665, Oil on canvas, Mauritshuis, The Hague, Netherlands
Leonardo da Vinci – Mona Lisa, 1503–06, Oil on poplar panel, Musée du Louvre, Paris
Edvard Munch, The Scream, 1893, Oil, tempera, pastel and crayon on cardboard, National Gallery and Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway
Louise Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun – Marie Antoinette in a Muslin dress, 1783, canvas, oil, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, US
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Share on FacebookI think it's only weird when a person who wears glasses all the time takes them off, and not the other way around..... at least I don't find much difference on the visual impact in these paintings. Or maybe it's just me, idk.
I think it's only weird when a person who wears glasses all the time takes them off, and not the other way around..... at least I don't find much difference on the visual impact in these paintings. Or maybe it's just me, idk.
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