In the Nathan W Pyle comic (coffee-bar perspective), there is the interesting twist that it’s probably the back wall they are calling the 4th wall, whereas usually (and certainly for stage plays) it is the front wall, facing us the audience.
Actually, that one reminded me of a neat little (free) game on Steam called Perspective. You have to use that shrink and grow effect, among others to solve the levels.
Only the picture and Arlo’s hands seem to be cut-and-pasted, not entire panels. Look at Arlo’s head and shoulders. Interesting.
It’s interesting that Lewis Carroll used drugs, not perspective, to make Alice grow and shrink. There is so much fun he could have had by playing with perspective, and I don’t think he ever did it.
In the Nathan W Pyle comic (coffee-bar perspective), there is the interesting twist that it’s probably the back wall they are calling the 4th wall, whereas usually (and certainly for stage plays) it is the front wall, facing us the audience.
Actually, that one reminded me of a neat little (free) game on Steam called Perspective. You have to use that shrink and grow effect, among others to solve the levels.
Only the picture and Arlo’s hands seem to be cut-and-pasted, not entire panels. Look at Arlo’s head and shoulders. Interesting.
It’s interesting that Lewis Carroll used drugs, not perspective, to make Alice grow and shrink. There is so much fun he could have had by playing with perspective, and I don’t think he ever did it.