An early example of an impossible object comes from
Apolinère Enameled, a 1916 advertisement painted by
Marcel Duchamp. It depicts a girl painting a bed-frame with white enamelled paint, and deliberately includes conflicting perspective lines, to produce an impossible object. To emphasise the deliberate impossibility of the shape, a piece of the frame is missing. |left
Swedish artist
Oscar Reutersvärd was one of the first to deliberately design many impossible objects. He has been called "the father of impossible figures". In 1934, he drew the Penrose triangle, some years before the Penroses. In Reutersvärd's version, the sides of the triangle are broken up into cubes. In 1956, British psychiatrist
Lionel Penrose and his son, mathematician
Roger Penrose, submitted a short article to the
British Journal of Psychology titled "Impossible Objects: A Special Type of Visual Illusion". This was illustrated with the Penrose triangle and Penrose stairs. The article referred to Escher, whose work had sparked their interest in the subject, but not Reutersvärd, of whom they were unaware. The article was published in 1958. From the 1930s onwards, Dutch artist
M. C. Escher produced many drawings featuring paradoxes of perspective gradually working towards impossible objects. In 1957, he produced his first drawing containing a true impossible object:
Cube with Magic Ribbons. He produced many further drawings featuring impossible objects, sometimes with the entire drawing being an impossible object.
Waterfall and
Belvedere are good examples of impossible constructions. His work did much to draw the attention of the public to impossible objects. Some contemporary artists are also experimenting with impossible figures, for example,
Jos de Mey,
Shigeo Fukuda,
Sandro del Prete,
István Orosz (
Utisz),
Guido Moretti,
Tamás F. Farkas,
Mathieu Hamaekers, and
Kokichi Sugihara. ==Constructed impossible objects==