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Spaces that cause vertigo and play with the senses

Peter Kogler and his psychedelic samples

Just like the Museum of Illusions in Ljubljana, the premises of the Brussels art gallery ING Art Center and the ERES-Stiftung in Munich honestly play with human perception. This was done by Peter Kogler, a world-renowned Austrian artist who made you question your senses with his monochromatic graphics.

Yes, in the premises of the art gallery ING Art Center in Brussels and the premises of the Munich Foundation ERES-Stiftung let's start doubt your own senses, the artist provided Peter Kogler, who covered the walls of the showrooms, corridors and other spaces there psychedelic patterns, which make them work distorted and skillfully play with human perception.

READ MORE: Ljubljana is richer for the Museum of Illusions

A place where one doubts one's senses.
A place where one doubts one's senses.

Famous Austrian holder, which is already working more than 30 years and in May 2016 he also came forward in Slovenia, established himself on the international scene in the late seventies. In his works it interweaves architecture, space and new media. Since 1984, it has been used as the only tool for creation computer. "By mutating simple elements from accessible computer programs, he developed his own, a labyrinth-like structure, which illustrates on the one hand the inner organic world and after another the outside, urban world man," a well-known curator once wrote about Kogler's works Edelbert Köb.

Peter Kogler - playing with human perception:

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