Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Entertainment Arts+Culture

Video: Scientists unlock secret of 'Girl with Pearl Earring' painting

By measuring brainwaves, scientists discovered which part was the most stimulated



Visitors looks at the Johannes Vermeer's painting "Girl with a Pearl Earring" at the Mauritshuis museum in The Hague, 27 October 2022.
Image Credit: AFP

The Hague: Johannes Vermeer's "Girl With The Pearl Earring" is one of the world's most popular paintings - and now scientists believe they know why, by measuring how the brain reacts when the work is viewed.

The Mauritshuis museum in The Hague, which houses the 17th century masterpiece, commissioned neuroscientists to measure brain output when viewing the portrait and other well-known works.

They discovered that the viewer is held captive by a special neurological phenomenon they called "Sustained Attentional Loop", which they believe is unique to the "Girl With The Pearl Earring".

Get exclusive content with Gulf News WhatsApp channel

The viewer's eye is automatically drawn first to the girl's own eye, then down to her mouth, then across to the pearl, then back to the eye - and so it continues.

Advertisement

This makes you look at the painting longer than others, explained Martin de Munnik, from research company Neurensics that carried out the study.

"You have to pay attention whether you want to or not. You have to love her whether you want to or not," he said.

By measuring brainwaves, the scientists also discovered the precuneus, the part of the brain governing consciousness and personal identity, was the most stimulated.

"It was predictable that the Girl was special. But the 'why' was also a surprise to us," said De Munnik.

Advertisement

He said it was the first known study to use EEG and MRI brain scanning machines to measure the neurological response to artwork.

"The longer you look at somebody, the more beautiful or more attractive somebody becomes," he noted, which also explains the popularity of the Dutch master's subject.

A photograph shows a 4-meter-high 3D print of Johannes Vermeer's painting "Girl with a Pearl Earring", displayed at the Mauritshuis museum in The Hague on June 8, 2023.
Image Credit: AFP

"Why are you familiar with this painting and not with the other paintings? Because of this special thing she has."

'The brain doesn't lie'

The scientists also compared the neurological response when looking at the genuine painting in the museum versus being confronted with a reproduction.

Advertisement

They found the emotional reaction experienced by the viewer was ten times stronger for an original than a poster.

To carry out the tests, scientists attached an eye tracker and cap to track brainwaves on 10 subjects that were shown the real paintings but also reproductions.

It shows the importance of seeing original art, said Mauritshuis Director Martine Gosselink.

"It's so important to engage with art, whether it's photography, or dance, or old masters from the 17th century," the director, 55, told AFP in an interview.

"It is important, and it really helps to develop your brain... The brain doesn't lie," she added.

Advertisement

Vermeer often drew the focus onto one spot in his works, with the surrounding details more blurred, she explained.

However, the "Girl With The Pearl Earring" has three such focal points - the eye, mouth, and pearl - and Gosselink said this set the work apart from other Vermeer paintings.

"Here we see somebody really looking at you, whereas all other paintings by Vermeer, you see someone writing or doing some needlework, or a person busy doing something," she said.

"But that's the big difference with this girl. She's watching you."

De Munnik, 65, said it would be interesting to carry out similar studies on other famous paintings, such as Da Vinci's Mona Lisa for example.

Advertisement

Mauritshaus director Gosselink alluded to a friendly rivalry between the two great works.

"People sometimes call (The Girl With The Pearl Earring) the Mona Lisa of the North, but I think times are changing, so maybe the Mona Lisa is the Girl of the South," she joked.

Advertisement