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Nomad
24th February 2006, 21:39
Mona Lisa Smiling
By David Waddleton

There is some confusion or disagreement to whether Mona Lisa is smiling in the ever so famous painting by Leonardo de Vinci, and even though the majority of people think that she is smiling there continues to be random studies and questioning. Maybe from a history stand point our views and opinions would have been different if the question about the smile was asked 400 years ago.

Located in the Louvre museum of art in Paris, France there hangs the aging 500 year old Mona Lisa. At first glance many will say the portrait of the unknown woman is smiling and then for some others the smile seems to fade after and extended period of time of observation. Was this ambiguous smile painted with an intention to confuse or to inspire curiosity and wonder?
Every year or so the Mona Lisa is inspected for aging and deterioration. When it is necessary touch ups are made very carefully to the painting. This has raised some concerns with historians and art enthusiasts who worry that with continuous restoration the Mona Lisa will eventually lose her original appearance and intended facial emotions.

The painting has yellowed from the layers of varnish applied to protect it over the centuries, but so far the Louvre has resisted pressure to touch it up. The last real work on the Mona Lisa dates back to the mid 1950s, when several age spots were removed. The thin poplar panel on which the Mona Lisa was painted in oil has changed shape since the last evaluation done by conservation experts. The question remains is the change in shape of the panel and the touch ups enough to change the facial expressions?

Some studies of Mona Lisa’s smile have concluded that she was smiling because she was a majority percent happy, and then a small percent disgusted, fearful and a little angry through scientific calculations and computer imagery emotion detection. With applied technology it can be illuminating to hear the results of a certain experiment but I believe that your own opinion of the piece is all that you need and not to depend on what a computer concludes is a smile or not. Human intuition will always be more accurate then a computer and for that I mean I can personally tell by the way a friend walks, sits, smiles if he is upset or sad or happy even a baby reacts to a smile.

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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=David_Waddleton

classylady
25th February 2006, 07:40
I am sorry but members are not allow to list another pay for site.

I just followed your link and it is to a pay site. sorry this thread needs closing.

Please read the tos........

Nomad
25th February 2006, 12:16
Hello. I'm not sure what you mean by 'pay site'.. The authors of the articles posted there want their writing to be seen. This is how it is explained:

'The authors of these articles have given their permission for you to reprint the articles provided that you include the entire article including SIG line in tact and that you make the links 'linkable' or 'active'. Consider this as link-currency and it is your payment to the author of the article.'


I discussed this with Glenn before I posted them. In fact, I was the one who suggested this new Forum to him, and he thought it was a good idea.

We realize that not everyone is a writer, or will take the time to write an article, but that people can contribute by finding articles of interest and when it is permitted, post those articles here. If you have any further questions, you might want to check with Glenn.

vos
25th February 2006, 13:05
we did not know ,The authors of these articles have given their permissionand and that you discussed this with Glenn before you posted them.
my apology for this misunderstanding

to come back to the Nona Lisa take a look here The Mona Lisa was stolen ! BY bernardumaine

http://www.innertraveler.com/publicgallery/showphoto.php?photo=21952&cat=500&ppuser=143&sl=b

beautiful background too!!

Nomad
25th February 2006, 14:11
No problem..

BTW: I love that painting you linked to..

It's beautiful!

Nomad

ppetersen
25th February 2006, 17:20
I remember that painting of Bernards, and it was entered in a contest I believe to redo the Mona Lisa... :) Excellent one...

On a side note, I still think she's smiling like she is because she's hiding something... :) she's a lady, and as a lady myself, I know that look!!! And I've always loved the painting...

classylady
25th February 2006, 18:18
Sorry Nomad was just doing my job as a mod.......

judee3d
26th February 2006, 14:32
What I think is most interesting about any debate as to whether she is or isn't smiling is the fact that the original intent of the artist was probably to make it subtle enough that each viewer could see what they want in it. Or, not so much what they want, but who they are, their state of mind.

The portrait raises questions as does any portrait that shows just a hint of emotion rather than openly sad or happy faces. What is she feeling and why?

But the answers to that question come from each viewer - they see the portrait through their own filter of humanity, and their interpretation is largely due to their current emotional and psychological state of mind. Mona Lisa becomes the perfect mirror, reflecting back to us who we are and what we feel.

I think this is true of other art also, especially that which is more abstract, less easily defined. Wherever there is enigma, the viewer will interpret through their current state of consciousness.

Just a thought or two...