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The artist painted the broken and suspended telegraph poles. How did the artist paint?

A photo recently went viral on the Internet. A telephone pole was broken off, as if it was suspended in mid-air. All this happens not by magic, but by a new technology called 3D painting. 3D painting is a painting technology that modern young people love and admire very much. Its biggest feature is the authenticity of the painting. It is as lifelike as real. You won’t know it is just a painting unless you look closely.

This painting technique is not as simple as flat painting. Flat painting is just a flat picture composed of points and lines combined with each other and unfolded in a limited space and paper. Compared with flat painting, 3D painting combines light and scene. The most important thing in 3D painting is 3D, that is, three-dimensionality. A good painter will generally adapt to local conditions, select a site that he recognizes and likes, and then use his imagination and creativity to make new changes to the location according to the conditions of the site. 3D paintings are mostly wall and floor paintings, which are similar to street graffiti. Compared with street graffiti, 3D paintings are more euphemistic and complete.

Why has 3D painting attracted so much attention recently? Because it plays a great role in promoting urban beautification and rural revitalization, and also contributes to rural poverty alleviation. On city streets, distribution boxes in flower gardens are an eyesore. In order to improve this shortcoming, beautify the urban environment, and make the distribution boxes and flower gardens look more harmonious, 3D painting comes in handy. In addition, with the development of rural tourism, many B&Bs have also chosen to make themselves more harmonious with mountains and rivers in this way, so as to develop natural and green folk customs and promote rural revitalization.

3D paintings come to improve the environment, and tourists come to see the beauty of this scene, but there are always some people who are different and enjoy destroying harmony. This technology seems to simply make use of people's visual illusions, but in fact there are many difficulties and complexities in light and graphic construction. A 3D painting requires far more time and energy than a flat painting. So I hope that all spectators can treat every 3D painting on the street kindly. What is condensed in it is the painstaking efforts of the painters. Your sentence of "visiting here" is equivalent to stabbing a knife in other people's hearts. Therefore, to protect and cherish paintings, everyone needs to start from themselves, respect the efforts of others, and respect the spirit of 3D painting.