
Mona Lisa's beauty comes as much from what she's hiding
as what she reveals. Who is she looking at? What has triggered that famous
smile? Is she even smiling at all?
Art historians have deduced in that singularly
mysterious visage everything from a cross-dressing self-portrait of Leonardo da
Vinci to the knowing glance of an unfaithful wife to the satisfied pride of a
pregnant woman. Bob Dylan once even offered up a very 20th century American
conclusion on the matter: "Mona Lisa must've had the highway blues."
A Sicilian professor of pathological anatomy has come
up with the latest and what is arguably the least poetic explanation imaginable
for why Mona Lisa looks the way she does: high cholesterol. Vito Franco of the
But Franco, who presented his findings at a European
congress on human pathology in
Among the some 100 works he's studied, which also
include Egyptian sculptures and contemporary paintings, Franco is particularly
fond of exploring those depicting ailments during the European Renaissance.
Among his conclusions: the Spanish child, Margarita, in Diego Velázquez's Las
Meninas likely suffered from both a thyroid condition known as goiter and the
genetic disorder linked to premature puberty, McCune-Albright syndrome. The
unusually long thin fingers of the young nobleman in Sandro Botticelli's
Portrait of a Young Man, which is displayed at the National Gallery in
Luisa Dolza, a Paris-based historian of science,
doesn't see much new ground being broken by Franco, in either the study of art
or medicine. Still, she acknowledges that the project is useful for making the
public aware of what was happening during the Renaissance, when the great minds
threw themselves into different fields in the pursuit of both truth and beauty.
"Something new was happening then, where if the wife of the emperor was
ugly, she was depicted as ugly. This was no photo-shop," said Dolza, an
expert in Renaissance-era technology. "These painters, Leonardo and
Michelangelo, studied anatomy and illnesses. They loved to represent humans
with all their faults." (Read: "How a 'New' da Vinci
Was Discovered.")
As for the Mona Lisa in particular, that enigmatic face
will keep prompting new theories from its admirers. Over the past decade,
American neurological researchers have suggested that her seemingly
disappearing smile is an effect caused by the way the brain processes certain
elements of light. There is another possibility that may be hard to disprove:
La Gioconda's face is itself a mirror on which the story of our own lives is
reflected. Does it make you smile? Sort of.
Saturday, Jan. 09, 2010 TIME
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1952583,00.html