The Protean Nature of Sublimation: Chemical, Psychological, and Apollonian
Mona Lisa. Source: Wikipedia Introduction The term sublimation migrates from the natural sciences to psychoanalysis and eventually into broader reflections on creativity and culture. In chemistry, it names the passage of a solid directly into vapor. Freud adopts the word to describe an inner shift in which intimate impulses are displaced into artistic or intellectual achievement. When he turns to Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa in 1910, this process becomes central to a broader dialogue between art and desire. The transformation Freud describes resembles what Nietzsche earlier called the “Apollonian veil”—an aesthetic surface that makes existence bearable. Sublimation, in this sense, is not only a psychological mechanism; it is a cultural necessity. The Enigma of a Smile Freud’s visit to the Louvre leads him to confront what he calls the “riddle” of the Mona Lisa ’s expression. Generations of critics had remarked on the smile’s peculiar mixture of warmth and distance. Freud propo...