Birds once tried to eat painted grapes, fooled by Zeuxis’s brush in ancient Greece, but the real trick was a painted curtain that even deceived a fellow artist. This playful battle of illusion, known as trompe l’oeil, has long been about more than visual trickery. Renaissance and Dutch painters elevated the genre, but today’s artists use it to spark curiosity and challenge assumptions. Daiya Yamamoto’s minimalist canvases turn humble masking tape into meditative beauty, while Jochen Mühlenbrink’s hyperreal parcel tape and fogged windows invite viewers to question what’s real and what’s staged. For Josephine Halvorson, trompe l’oeil becomes a practice in seeing—an exercise in attention, not deception. Meanwhile, Anne Carney Raines draws on her theater background to blur the line between artifice and reality, echoing the staged dramas of daily life. In a world of deepfakes and digital illusions, trompe l’oeil remains a reminder: the eye loves a puzzle, and reality is rarely what it seems. #TrompeLOeil #ContemporaryArt #VisualIllusion