The smile in Kooning's Woman I painting is a reference to Renaissance art, specifically the Monalisa's smile which can be interpreted as either smirking or disgust.
<h3>Who was Willem de Kooning?</h3>
Willem de Kooning (1904 - 1997) was a Dutch American nationalized painter, an exponent in the years after World War II of abstract expressionism and gestural painting.
One of his best-known works is the Woman series. In the case of the first work of this series, the author refers to Renaissance art because the expression of the woman's lips refers to Monalisa's lips, which do not have a clear expression and allow interpretation by those who contemplate her.
Learn more about painting in: brainly.com/question/25795412
Metaphor? A cardinal sin is an intangible thing....
They have producers and directors that keep them on track about what happens in the movie and how they make it.
<span>The houses they occupied were made of bricks and had no foundations. The bricks were made of mudand chopped straw, molded and dried in the hot Egyptian sun.</span>
He wants to force her to interact with people so that she wouldn't be so sad over the death of Tybalt. He also really doesn't want people to think she is strange or weird because she has spent a long time mourning his death.