This image shows a scene with 'one-point' perspective. The road converges to a single point in the distance, known as the 'vanishing point'.
The Battle of San Romano by Paolo Uccello was painted in about 1440. It is a 6’ x 10’7” egg tempera with walnut oil and linseed oil on poplar painting. Notice the foreground, middle
ground and background (distant) figures.
Peasant Wedding by Pieter Bruegel-the-elder, 1525-1569
Copying and pasting the man in the middle ground and placing him next to the man in the foreground highlights the use of perspective in Pieter
Bruegel's painting.
Pieter Bruegel the Elder 1525-1569 Children's Games
The Numbering at Bethlehem after Pieter Bruegel the Elder
“Atlanta Beltline” by Corey Barksdale(The artist is sitting in front of his artwork.)
“One Point Perspective”
by Donna Howell-
Sickles of Texas, USA
Anime-style person in perspective
Perspective in video game art: Cave Story 3-d
“A Dream She Had”
by Craig Blair – oil paint
“The Tree” by
Craig Blair
“Anubus and the City” by Craig Blair
Jamaican artist Roy Reid - “A Pig Is A Pig” - 1986
Jamaican artist – Rudi Patterson
“The Market
Vendor” A painting by Guyana-
born artist Joan
Bryan-Muss
Muralist at work on a large-scale wall painting (mural)
Perspective in a mural project, in Knoxville USA (artist unknown, currently)
A 'trompe l'oeil' mural in Quebec, Canada (artist unknown, currently)
Wall painting (mural) by 'trompe l’oeil' painter Patrick Kirwin
Exam tips:
* Do one foreground, one middle ground and one background (distant) version of the same object/ person, going from large to smaller, to even smaller.
*Background (distance) parts of the picture can be painted in paler colours (e.g. 'tints' of the brighter foreground colours.