Why does the Mona Lisa s smile seem to be nothing?

Updated on culture 2024-04-05
11 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    If you put on a pose like that, your smile will be like nothing...

    Or maybe I've been staring at that painting for too long and hallucinating...

    To understand the painting, we should experience the historical significance of this work, it is not famous because of its smile, but reflects the free spirit of advocating human nature in the Renaissance, as for the smile, it is only those critics who chiseled it, in the eyes of the critics, it seems that every corner of this painting, the heroine's smile is different, her eyes, her smile, and her abundant hands, are so perfect, and in fact, it is just an oil painting...

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Hehe. Actually, I think it's all people fanciing about the painting.

    No matter what kind of painting, you can see different effects from different angles, sometimes the focus is on the mouth, sometimes the focus is on the eyes. And these differences will see different effects, because people have brains and will think!

    That's why I said, let the so-called experts fool me.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Then you're going to have to ask her personally

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    I'm also studying art, so I don't think that question makes sense

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Yes: You are in a good mood and feel that the world is beautiful, so you are full of preferences for everything.

    None: You're in a mood that is too sad, not optimistic, (suicidal) and doesn't feel anything good.

    I learned to draw)

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    I studied art, and I heard it was because she didn't have teeth. Therefore, the painter painted it with a smile in "Coming and Going!!

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    It is the influence of this work on the post-tourism bureau.

    First of all, this painting was born in the Renaissance period, you know, before this, painters were counting the painting of gods, churches or something, and Mona Lisa, as an ordinary person, can be moved to the canvas, which is from thousands of years of "painting gods" and "painting saints" to "painting people" and "painting ordinary people" The pioneering work, and from "theomy" to "humanism" is the theme of the Renaissance.

    Before the Renaissance, Western painting mainly depicted gods, gods and goddesses in Greek and Roman mythology, Zeus, Venus, or religious figures, or "saints" - historical heroes, Caesar, Alexander and the like. In short, they are all prophets who are far away from the real world, and their expressions are mostly extraordinary, such as lofty, great, and suffering, and even most of them have no expressions, no thoughts, and are the same.

    It was only in the Renaissance that painters began to look away from the altar and to the earth. And "Mona Lisa" can be said to be the first masterpiece in history to paint real people, live people, and ordinary people, who is Mona Lisa? It's just a businessman's wife, an unknown person, and even her appearance is extremely ordinary.

    Since then, "humanism" has been created. From "God-oriented" to "human-oriented", from illusory to realistic, from dead to alive, from heaven to earth, this is a great breakthrough in Western culture.

    It can be said that this painting is a milestone and representative work of the entire Renaissance, and the origin of European capitalism is derived from the Renaissance, and the significance of cultural history is very significant, far beyond the history of art. It can be said that the value of this painting is completely comparable to Copernicus's "heliocentric theory" and Darwin's "evolution theory", and since then the illusory creationism propagated by the church has been completely shattered and returned to the real world and rational nature.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    The jewel of the Louvre Museum in Paris, France: Da. Vinci's "Mona Lisa's Smile".

    The famous Italian painter Da. Created around 1904, Vinci's Mona Lisa became an aesthetic and philosophical symbolic image, and had long since become the object of imitation by Dadaist and Surrealist painters.

    For 500 years, people have been fascinated by the mysterious smile of the Mona Lisa. Different viewers or at different times seem to have different feelings. Sometimes I think she smiles comfortably and gently, sometimes she seems very serious, sometimes she is slightly sad, and sometimes she even shows ridicule and ridicule.

    In a painting, the change in light cannot make as much difference as in a sculpture. But on the Mona Lisa's face, a faint shadow looms over her eyes, casting a veil over her eyes and lips. And people's smiles are mainly manifested in the corners of the eyes and lips.

    Reach. Fincher, on the other hand, painted these faintly and without clear boundaries, hence this "mysterious smile".

    Dr. Livingstone, an expert in neurology at Harvard University, said that the Mona Lisa's smile is related to the visual nerve of the human body, not because of the inscrutable expression of the person in the painting.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Because no one knows who the Mona Lisa is in the painting? No one knows why she is laughing or what she is laughing at, and some even speculate that the Mona Lisa is not smiling at all, that is her natural expression. All kinds of speculation, so the Mona Lisa's smile is a mystery.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    She is smiling in her heart, Da Vinci's mentality of painting, and her very satisfied mentality is expressed in the brush.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Because no one knows what she's laughing at. And now you can't ask why she's laughing. So it's a mystery

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