The eyes in portraits seem to follow you because they're cleverly drawn or painted just right.
Imagine you're looking at a picture of someone on a wall, maybe it's your favorite cartoon character or even Grandma. When you walk closer, their eyes seem to look at you. When you step back, they still seem to be watching you. That happens because the artist made the eyes in such a way that no matter where you stand, they feel like they're looking straight at you.
How it works
Think of it like this: when you draw or paint someone’s face, their eyes are usually placed so that they’re pointing slightly towards the center of the picture, not directly at you. But if you draw them in a special way, it looks like they're looking right at you no matter where you stand.
It's like when you draw a smiley face on a paper, if you draw the eyes straight, and then you move your head side to side, the eyes still seem to follow you because of how they’re positioned. That’s why it feels like the portrait is watching you, it’s all art working together!
Examples
- Someone notices that the eyes in a famous painting look like they're watching them.
- A person walks past a portrait in a hallway, and it feels like the portrait is watching them.
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See also
- How does a hologram work? (in 1 minute)?
- Defining Portraiture: How are portraits both fact and fiction?
- How Does a Microscope Work?
- How Does Angular Size of the Sun and Moon Work?
- How Does Adaptive Optics Demonstration Model Work?