<span>That is like asking... "Why to artists paint things they color they actually are." They use perspective drawing to make the work more realistic. A drawing is done on a flat 2D (2 dimensional) surface, so the use of perspective is a visual "trick" to introduce the third dimension. When the drawing is done correctly, you don't really notice it. It just looks right. When it is done incorrectly, it sticks out.. and looks bad. Without perspective drawing, the image would look flat and out of plac</span>
Answer:
Hiperrealismo y fotorrealismo
El hiperrealismo es una tendencia radical de la pintura y escultura que nace en Estados Unidos a finales de los años 1960 tras el pop art y luego se extiende por toda Europa; los hiperrealistas rechazan cualquier interpretación de la realidad de la que proponen una reproducción mecánica.
lenses produce their image due to reflection of light