The Portrait of Dora Maar(92 cm×65 cm)painted by Pablo Picasso(1937)is an aesthetic masterpiece in the world(Brigitte,1996).Picasso paints Dora seating on a chair in frontal view with an off-set profile and...The Portrait of Dora Maar(92 cm×65 cm)painted by Pablo Picasso(1937)is an aesthetic masterpiece in the world(Brigitte,1996).Picasso paints Dora seating on a chair in frontal view with an off-set profile and disjunctive facial features(André,1976):that is,Dora’s nose becomes an extension of her face on which the"far"eye is seen looking straight at us.Why did Picasso paint his lover Dora in such a tortured style?展开更多
In the turbulent years of Chinese revolution, revolutionaries were driven not only by their noble beliefs and the lofty ideal of devoting all their lives to the liberation of the country and nation but also by pure lo...In the turbulent years of Chinese revolution, revolutionaries were driven not only by their noble beliefs and the lofty ideal of devoting all their lives to the liberation of the country and nation but also by pure love and passion for a beautiful life. Faced with life-and-death tests, they sublimated their love for an individual to love for the people and the entire Chinese nation. They kept others safe by keeping themselves apart from their lovers, writing a moving chapter of love with their lives.展开更多
基金supported by the External Cooperation Program of BIC, Chinese Academy of Sciences (GJHZ201302): Collaboration between Institute of Biophysics CAS and Queensland Brain Institute, University of Queensland, Australia
文摘The Portrait of Dora Maar(92 cm×65 cm)painted by Pablo Picasso(1937)is an aesthetic masterpiece in the world(Brigitte,1996).Picasso paints Dora seating on a chair in frontal view with an off-set profile and disjunctive facial features(André,1976):that is,Dora’s nose becomes an extension of her face on which the"far"eye is seen looking straight at us.Why did Picasso paint his lover Dora in such a tortured style?
文摘In the turbulent years of Chinese revolution, revolutionaries were driven not only by their noble beliefs and the lofty ideal of devoting all their lives to the liberation of the country and nation but also by pure love and passion for a beautiful life. Faced with life-and-death tests, they sublimated their love for an individual to love for the people and the entire Chinese nation. They kept others safe by keeping themselves apart from their lovers, writing a moving chapter of love with their lives.