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The children's book, Round Trip, by Ann Jonas used ambiguous images in the illustrations, where the reader could read the book front to back normally at first, and then flip it upside down to continue the story and see the pictures in a new perspective. [16]
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The Barmaley Fountain was made widely known from several August 1942 photographs by Emmanuil Evzerikhin that juxtaposed the carnage of the Battle of Stalingrad with the image of children at play. [1] The fountain was restored after World War II and was removed in the 1950s. [citation needed]
The opposite of such ambiguous images are impossible objects. [15] Pictures or photographs may also be ambiguous at the semantic level: the visual image is unambiguous, but the meaning and narrative may be ambiguous: is a certain facial expression one of excitement or fear, for instance?
Boys Playing on the Shore (also Children Playing on the Shore) is a painting by Finnish painter Albert Edelfelt completed in 1884. [1] [2] The painting depicts three boys playing on a shore with a self-made bark boat . [2] Albert Edelfelt painted the picture in Haikko, Porvoo, Finland from August to October in 1884. The painting was meant to be ...
George Bellows' (1882–1925) Forty-two Kids, painted in 1907, bears obvious similarity to The Swimming Hole, although Bellows' painting has been interpreted as a parody of the Eakins, and the many naked children of the title are playing in the urban Hudson River of New York City rather than in a rural setting. [46]
New York Street Games is a 2010 documentary film directed by Matt Levy about children's games played by kids in New York City for centuries. [1] The games are fondly remembered by people who grew up in the city.