What a laugh - you've all been arguing over a bloody spelling mistake! I intended trompe l'oeil..

And I stand by my statement. Trompe l'oeil may not have been invented during the Rennaissance, but it came into its own then as part of art and architecture. The deception originally was the extension of an object by painting "more" of it - hence the architectural focus. The best translation of it that I've seen is "optical deception" or "trick of the eye". It was used to "visually extend" a room or a building, or even the view from a window. This was why it was photographically realistic in nature. The term has simply transmuted over time into anything which is an device for optical illusion, again either in art or in architecture.

(Damn, I KNEW those art history classes would come in handy one day!)



The idiot also known as Capfka ...