J.M.W. Turner's "Rain, Steam and Speed-The Great Western Railway"

Origin
Joseph Mailord William Turner (1775 - 1851) was an English Romanticist landscape painter. Turner was considered to be a high controversial figure in his day, however now he is regarded as the artist who elevated landscape painting to rival history painting. In his later years he used oils to an evocation of almost pure light by use of shimmering color. His most notable example of this mature style can be seen in "Rain, Steam and Speed-The Great Western Railway" where objects are barely recognizable, as if you were on the speeding train watching the landscape rushing by. The sense of speed placed into the painting through his brush turned this famous painting into an artifact.

Effects
Standing in front of it for more that five minutes causes viewer to experience speed bursts at random. It's unknown how long the effects last as their are several cases, when someone is walking they suddenly end up miles away from where they were going due to the physical burst of speed.