Parallax
The term “parallax” refers to the
apparent movement of objects when viewed from different positions. The everyday example of this is
seen driving on the highway-- when you look out the window, electrical poles
near the road seem to zoom past, while trees in the distance appear to slowly
drift by.
“The philosophical twist to be added (to parallax),
of course, is that the observed distance is not simply subjective, since the
same object that exists 'out there' is seen from two different stances, or
points of view. It is rather that, as Hegel would
have put it, subject and object are inherently mediated so that an 'epistemological' shift in the subject's point
of view always reflects an ontological shift in the object itself.
Or—to put it in Lacanese—the subject's gaze is
always-already inscribed into the perceived object itself, in the guise of its
'blind spot,' that which is 'in the object more than object itself', the point
from which the object itself returns the gaze. Sure the picture is in my eye,
but I am also in the picture”.[37]
— Slavoj Žižek, The Parallax View
parallax effect in Photography:
The Parallax Effect is also known
as the Ken Burns effect, which is named
after the filmmaker who made this effect his signature
visual style in his documentary films. This technique is a panning and zooming effect that is used
to create something like a video from still images.
Ken Burns Effect: Explained
& Illustrated with Gettysburg Address
BEAUTY, by Rino
Stefano Tagliafierro
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NL0AkAIHSCE
Tutorials
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmeLfjnJL6o
https://petapixel.com/2017/08/09/give-still-photos-2-5d-parallax-effect-photoshop/
http://nofilmschool.com/2013/11/tutorial-how-to-animate-still-photos-in-after-effects