Answer: OPART
OPART is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted over 20 times. There are related answers (shown below). Try defining OPART with Google.
Referring crossword puzzle clues
- Dizzying designs
- Museum offering
- Dazzling display
- Some paintings
- Eyeball-bending drawings
- Dizzying genre
- Swirly prints
- Visual illusion genre
- MoMA display
- Eyeball benders
- Eyeball-bending pictures
- Dizzying pictures
- Some museum hangings
- Illusory display
- Eye-popping prints
- Abstract style of the '60s
- Swirly posters
- Style of painting
- Some MoMA works
- Illusory painting genre
- Eye-bending pictures
- Abstract painting style of the '60s
- Abstract form prominent in the '60s
- Painting style
- Illusory works
- Illusionary genre
- Eye-bending paintings
- Eye-bending designs
- Dizzying visuals
- Dizzying paintings
- Dizzying gallery fare
- Dizzying gallery display
- Dizzying drawings
- Bridget Riley genre
- Abstract painting style
- Works with visual effects
- Visual-illusion genre
- Some museum displays
- Painting style that's visually teasing
- Motion pictures?
- Mesmerizing designs
- Illusory paintings
- Illusionary works
- Genre of Vasarely's "Zebras"
- Eyeball-bending work
- Eyeball-bending genre
- Eye-popping genre
- Eye-fooling pictures
- Eye-fooling genre
- Eye-catching works
- Eye-bending works
- Drawings that deceive
- Dizzying posters
- Dizzying images
- Dazzling drawings of the '60s
- Bridget Riley's genre
- Abstract style
- Abstract form of the '60s
- "Perceptual abstraction"
- Visually teasing painting style
- Visually teasing images
- Victor Vasarely's movement
- Victor Vasarely's genre
- Victor Vasarely's "Zebras," e.g.
- Style with illusory motion
- Some psychedelic designs
- Some drawings that deceive
- Some abstract works
- Showy gallery display
- Retro poster genre
- Pictures that may make you dizzy
- Pictures that create illusions
- Perceptual abstraction
- Off-the-wall piece on the wall?
- Moving pictures?
- Mind-bending paintings
- It often employs geometric patterns
- Illusory pictures
- Illusionary paintings
- Head-spinning paintings
- Head-spinning hangings
- Eyeball-bending works
- Eyeball bender
- Eye-popping canvases
- Eye-fooling works
- Eye-boggling work
- Dizzying pix
- Dizzying painting genre
- Dizzying MoMA works
- Dizzying display
- Dizzying design
- Dazzling works
- Dazzling designs
- Certain abstract paintings
- Bridget Riley's "Movement in Squares," e.g.
- Bedazzling museum works
- Bauhaus offshoot
- Abstract creations
- 1960s painting movement
- '60s painting movement
- Works with afterimages
- Works to make you dizzy
- Work with wavy lines, maybe
- Work with a pattern, maybe
- Work that gives the illusion of movement
- Work by Bridget Riley, for instance
- What flashing or swelling is symptomatic of
- Warhol style
- Visually teasing genre
- Visually stimulating images
- Visual style that tricks the eye
- Visual movement popularized in the 1960s
- Visual illusions
- Victor Vasarely specialty
- Vasarely's genre
- Trippy graphics
- Trippy designs
- Tricky genre
- The painting in Roger Sterling's office on "Mad Men", for example
- Swirls and such
- Subject of a pioneering 1965 MoMA show
- Subject of a 1964 Time article subtitled "Pictures That Attack the Eye"
- Style pioneered by Josef Albers
- Style of Bridget Riley paintings
- Style known as perceptual abstraction
- Stanczak's "Provocative Current," e.g.
- Squiggles and such
- Some psychedelic decoration
- Some MoMA designs
- Some modern museum designs
- Some eyeball benders
- Some deceptive designs
- Some dazzling designs
- Some 60's paintings
- Some 60's museum exhibits
- Richard Anuszkiewicz pictures
- Reality-bending paintings
- Popular 1960s' style of abstractionism
- Pictures that may look like they're moving
- Pictures that may be difficult to focus on
- Pictures that can make you dizzy
- Pictures named by Time in 1964
- Peter Max speciality
- Perplexing pictures
- Paintings with kinetic illusions
- Paintings with intense contrast, often
- Paintings with geometric patterns
- Painting style that teases the eyeballs
- Painting style of the 60's
- Painting movement
- Outgrowth of geometrical abstraction
- Offshoot of Bauhaus constructivism
- Museum display, at times
- Moving pictures, seemingly
- Moving picture, seemingly
- Moving image?
- Movement that might leave you reeling
- Movement that inspired '60s fashion
- MOMA showing
- Modern-museum display
- Modern gallery item
- Mod style, in painting
- Mind-boggling designs
- Mesmerizing painting style
- Magic Eye picture, e.g.
- Magic Eye images, e.g.
- M.O.M.A. display
- Looking at it a long time might make your head hurt
- Julian Stanczak's genre
- Josef Albers' style
- Josef Albers' genre
- It's usually nonrepresentational
- It's eye-grabbing
- It's bedazzling
- It can make you dizzy
- It becomes another genre if a "P" is added to the front
- Influential style of the 1960s
- Illusory painting
- Illusory movement movement
- Illusory images
- Illusory illustration
- Illusions in paint
- Illusionary abstractions
- Illusion-creating works
- Illusion-based visual style
- Illusion-based genre
- Good genre for a maze maker
- Genre that plays tricks on your eyes
- Genre that makes use of trompe loeil
- Genre of Vasarely's "Zebra"
- Genre of Marina Apollonio's works
- Genre of Escher's "Relativity"
- Genre of dizzying drawings
- Genre of a 1965 exhibit called "The Responsive Eye"
- Genre in MoMA's 1965 "The Responsive Eye" exhibit
- Genre for Bridget Riley's "Shadow Play"
- Genre characterized by its illusion of movement
- Eyeball-twisting drawings
- Eyeball-bending paintings
- Eyeball-bending painting genre
- Eyeball-bending images
- Eyeball-bending graphics
- Eyeball-bending gallery display
- Eyeball-bending display
- Eyeball-bending designs
- Eye-twisting poster genre
- Eye-twisting display
- Eye-tricking works
- Eye-tricking work
- Eye-tricking paintings
- Eye-tricking designs
- Eye-tricking creativity
- Eye-teasing paintings
- Eye-straining exhibit
- Eye-popping works
- Eye-popping designs
- Eye-popping canvasses
- Eye-fooling paintings
- Eye-fooling images
- Eye-fooling designs
- Eye-fooling canvases
- Eye-deceiving designs
- Eye-cue tests?
- Eye-catching works?
- Eye-catching display
- Eye-catching designs
- Eye-boggling prints
- Eye-bending painting
- Eye-bending genre
- Eye twisters
- Eye dazzlers
- Escher's genre
- Dizzying paintings, briefly: 2 wds.
- Dizzying painting movement
- Dizzying museum display
- Dizzying illusions
- Dizzying hangings
- Dizzying gallery works
- Dizzying gallery hangings
- Dizzying designs: 2 wds.
- Dizzying abstract genre
- Dizzy-making drawings
- Dazzling style
- Dazzling posters
- Dazzling painting genre popularized by Victor Vasarely and Bridget Riley
- Dazzling gallery display
- Dazzling drawings
- Cultural phenomenon of the '60s
- Confusing pictures
- Category for MOMA
- Bridget Riley's paintings
- Bridget Riley's movement
- Bridget Riley's "Blaze 4," e.g.
- Bridget Riley specialty
- Bridget Riley creations
- Bauhaus course
- Abstract works that seem to move
- Abstract work
- Abstract visual style for the 1960s, giving the illusion of movement
- Abstract visual style
- Abstract visual images genre
- Abstract visual images
- Abstract style popular in the '60s
- Abstract painting
- Abstract images
- Abstract designs often done in black and white
- 60's-70's gallery hangings
- 60's poster genre
- 1960s' style of abstract painting, with dramatic visual effects
- 1960s poster style
- "Pictures that Attack the Eye," according to a Time magazine headline
- '60s painting style
- '60s abstract-image genre
- Eyeball benders
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