Many optical illusions are found in
architecture and, strangely enough, many of these were recognized long
before painting developed beyond its primitive stages. The architecture
of classic Greece displays a highly developed knowledge of many
geometrical optical illusions and the architects of those far-off
centuries carefully worked out details for counteracting them. Drawings
reveal many optical illusions to the architect, but many are not
predicted by them. The ever-changing relation..
Many optical illusions are found in
architecture and, strangely enough, many of these were recognized long
before painting developed beyond its primitive stages. The architecture
of classic Greece displays a highly developed knowledge of many
geometrical optical illusions and the architects of those far-off
centuries carefully worked out details for counteracting them. Drawings
reveal many optical illusions to the architect, but many are not
predicted by them. The ever-changing relations of lines and forms in
architecture as we vary our viewpoint introduce many optical illusions
which may appear and disappear. Any view of a group of buildings or of
the components of a single building will exhibit some optical
illusions. We never see in the reality the same relations of lines,
forms, colors, and brightnesses as indicated by the drawings or
blue-prints. Perhaps this is one of the best reasons for justifying the
construction of expensive models of our more pretentious structures.
No
detailed account of the many architectural optical illusions will be
attempted, for it is easy for the reader to see many of the
possibilities suggested by preceding chapters. However, a few will be
touched upon to reveal the magnitude of the illusory effect and to aid
the observer in looking for or recognizing them, or purely for
historical interest. In architecture the eye cannot be wholly satisfied
by such tools as the level, the square, and the plumb-line. The eye is
satisfied only when the appearance is satisfactory. For the
purpose of showing the extent of certain architectural optical
illusions, the compensatory measures applied by the Greeks are
excellent examples. These also reveal the remarkable application of
science to architecture as compared with the scanty application in
painting of the same period.
During the best period of
Grecian art many refinements were applied in order to correct optical
illusions. It would be interesting to know to what extent the magnitude
of the optical illusions as they appeared to many persons were actually
studied. The Parthenon of Athens affords an excellent example of the
magnitude of the corrections which the designer thought necessary in
order to satisfy the eye. The long lines of the architrave - the beam
which surmounts the columns or extends from column to column - would
appear to sag if it were actually straight. This is also true of the
stylobate, or substructure of a colonnade, and of pediments and other
features. These lines were often convex instead of being straight as
the eye desires to see them.
In the Parthenon, the stylobate
has an upward curvature of more than four inches on the sides of the
edifice and of more than two and a half inches on the east and west
fronts. Vertical features were made to incline inward in order to
correct the common appearance of leaning outward at the top. In the
Parthenon, the axes of the columns are not vertical, but they are
inclined inward nearly three inches. They are said also to be inclined
toward each other to such a degree that they would meet at an altitude
of one mile above the ground. The eleven-foot frieze and architrave is
inclined inward about one and one-half inches.
In Fig. 85, a represents the front of a temple as it should appear; b represents its appearance (exaggerated) if it were actually built like a without compensations for optical illusions; c represents it as built and showing the physical corrections (exaggerated) in order that it may appear to the eye as a does.
Tall
columns if they are actually straight are likely to appear somewhat
shrunken in the middle; therefore they are sometimes made slightly
swollen in order to appear straight. This outward curvature of the
profile is termed an entasis and in the Parthenon column, which is
thirty-four feet in height, amounted to about three-fourths of an inch.
In some early Grecian works, it is said that this correction was