"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
the camouflage is good indeed, but silly. Unless the car is used as a stationary bunker. This kind of camouflage is the mimicry concept, the opposite of the 'form breaking'.
Well, here the car is painted as a house. WW2 pill boxes in housed areas or streets where sometimes painted as parked cars, useless once they were spotted and providing an even better target.
In Holland bunkers were painted in an disruptive camouflage. Gun ports were painted in a very light colour, so they would even out the shade that fell into them, making them virtually invisible from a distance. Fake gun ports were painted on blind walls. Pictorial evidence shows that the fake gun ports were sprayed in machine gun and shell fire, with the real gun ports showing no damage at all...
Reminds me of that Chinese artist who paints himself to blend in with his background. Can't remember his name but they took the mick on Mock The Week a while ago.
Reminds me of that Chinese artist who paints himself to blend in with his background. Can't remember his name but they took the mick on Mock The Week a while ago.
"Seni Halimunan" (InvisibleArt) has apparently developed into quite a genre with contemporary Malaysians (there's one of them presently operating in London, it is said, but nobody can find him ). An example from KL:
"Seni Halimunan" (InvisibleArt) has apparently developed into quite a genre with contemporary Malaysians (there's one of them presently operating in London, it is said, but nobody can find him ).
Invisible art hey? What about that museum exhibition floor with nothing on the walls? Up to the viewer to visualise his/hers own piece of art. I think the concept is from the sixties and recently re-issued again in Switzerland I think. Another conceptual item, paintings with the image to the wall, i.e the back of the canvas showed to the public. No joking and all taken very seriously in art land.
Outstanding. I recall similar being used in a TV advertisement years ago - a woman, not wanting to be found, "disappearing" into a couch. From the "related links" of the above Liu Bolin clip, a high-tech version, a veritable "chameleon suit" incorporating movement: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PD83dqSfC0Y and the inspiration: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WHUTL4fujo. Great idea with the technological version, making a vehicle interior "invisible" for better driver visibility - the inverse of military camouflage. Talk about "swords into ploughshares"!
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Monday 14th of November 2011 06:00:26 AM