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SDXL 1.0
penrose triangle; style: escher impossible geometry, tesselation; "Around 1956, Julesz began at Bell Labs on a project to detect patterns in the output of random number generators. He decided to try mapping the numbers into images and using the pattern-detecting capabilities of the human visual system to look for a lack of randomness.[1] Julesz noticed that two identical random images when viewed through a stereoscope, appeared as if they were projected onto a uniform flat surface. He experimented with the image pair by shifting a square area in the center of one of the images by a small amount. When he viewed this pair through the stereoscope, the square appeared to rise out from the page." (Wikipedia, "Random dot stereogram")
This image shows an impossible Penrose triangle rendered with Escher-style impossible geometry and tessellations. The artwork evokes the visual experiments of Bela Julesz.
Created by fnord on Nov 11, 2023 using the SDXL 1.0 AI image generator model.
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