From da Vinci to TikTok, why are we so obsessed with being ‘symmetrical’?

Filters on social media allowing users to evaluate their features are becoming more and more popular

Every few months, a new face-symmetry-focused trend seems to take hold on TikTok. Illustration: Miki Kim/New York Times
Every few months, a new face-symmetry-focused trend seems to take hold on TikTok. Illustration: Miki Kim/New York Times

Mirrors lie. They reverse things. That face you see in the bathroom every morning, in your make-up compact: that is “opposite you” – the inverse of the face everyone else sees. We all know this, in theory.

And yet, for the past two years or so, this simple fact has riveted and sometimes deeply upset many people (especially young ones) trying out the facial-symmetry filters on social media. Some of these filters invert the mirror’s reflection, revealing images of one’s face as others perceive it, unnerving many users by casting new light on all the imperfections to which our familiar mirrored reflections inure, or even blind us: the uneven hairline, the crooked mouth, the not perfectly level eyes.

These all spring sharply into focus when reversed. For these reasons, confronting one’s “flipped” face can feel a bit alienating (not unlike hearing your own voice on tape).

Other filters startle in a different way, by creating symmetry, aligning features and smoothing irregularities, or presenting perfected yet deeply unfamiliar images via a kind of real-time Photoshop or virtual plastic surgery.

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The filters have become enormously popular. Every few months, a new face-symmetry-focused trend seems to take hold on TikTok, set to audio from music (like Olivia Rodrigo’s Deja Vu) or movies. Scroll through the pages and pages of users trying these filters, and you’ll find a range of reactions: some people laugh at what looks like a warped fun house reflection; others appear to feel real shock and despair at the unfamiliar face on their phone screen.

One commonly used symmetry effect, listed on the app as one of TikTok’s own Creative Effects, is Inverted. According to TikTok’s public view counts, the Inverted effect has been used in nearly 10 million videos. On the hashtag page for #Inverted, a description asks users: “Are you #Inverted? Use our Creative Effect and find out.”

The algorithm may favour symmetry filter use, as well. Whether it’s algorithmic, pure human interest or some mixture of the two, videos tagged #Inverted have netted a whopping 23 billion views on the app.

What propels this craze in this moment? The strangeness of pandemic times may be partly responsible. In the past two years, we’ve had both way too much virtual “face time” and way too little normal time with people face to face. In private, we’ve stared for hours at our own and other people’s faces, with all our flaws, on videoconferencing screens. (The rise in pandemic-era plastic surgery has been called the Zoom boom.) And in public, masks have deprived us of the healthy human experience of interacting with the faces all around us. This alone may explain a heightened interest in face-scrutinising apps.

But motivations well beyond the pandemic also drive this trend. There’s the modern amusement of going viral on social media; the ancient and eternal fascination with beauty and how to assess it; the lighthearted, carnivalesque fun of playing around with mirror images; and the deep desire to see ourselves as others see us.

Matthew Kazmierczak, who is a 35-year-old music producer and artist in Los Angeles, created a jingle that he used on his own face-symmetry TikTok: The left side of my face is more attractive than the right.

Kazmierczak’s TikTok has amassed more than 3.2 million views, and his little song has been used in more than 3,500 other TikToks so far. Kazmierczak, who performs as Katmaz, takes the popularity in stride. “It’s pretty cool to see other people using my song,” he says. “It’s just a fun thing, you know, it’s not changing the world.”

He approaches his own facial asymmetry with similar equanimity. “I used to be a boxer, so I know my nose is a little crooked,” he says. “I knew I was going to have an asymmetrical face, so it was just kind of funny.”

@hannahwarling

bonus points if they’re in LA ✋😭😭 have you tried this filter yet?? #symmetry #symmetricalface #filters #facesymmetrycheck

♬ i was just a little boy - j

For many, the experience is more ambivalent. Hannah Warling, a content creator in Los Angeles whose facial-symmetry TikTok has 3.9 million views, acknowledges that the filters help draw eyes to her page.

According to 25-year-old Warling, many influencers use filters strategically in hopes of going viral. “When you post something like that, then everybody can click on that filter, and that helps push your videos into the algorithm,” she says.

But Warling also described feeling a real sting in confronting her own facial asymmetry. “I have mixed feelings about it,” she says. “Somebody like me who has a really unsymmetrical face, it feels really unflattering – even though I am the person who made the video.” Warling’s video even included a request for plastic surgeon recommendations, although she says “it was mostly a joke.”

“I actually haven’t had any plastic surgery done on my face, but it’s not something I haven’t considered,” she says. “Living in LA, it’s easy to compare yourself, and think, ‘I would look better if I changed that’.”

Leslie Lizette Cartier, a 20-year-old student in Colorado, struck social media gold with her facial-symmetry TikTok, which has about 11 million views. Her choice for musical accompaniment? Quasimodo’s theme song from Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame. The song had been paired with the symmetry filters before and Cartier latched on to the trend. Its lyrics include: “You are deformed/ And you are ugly/ And these are the crimes for which the world shows little pity.” Despite the song’s message, Cartier says she was untroubled by the unevenness the filter revealed in her face.

“Growing up,” she says, “I’ve always kind of poked fun at the fact that one side of my face is just very strongly defined and the other side is a little softer. When I tried the symmetry filter, I was pretty much expecting it to be that way. I made the video with the intention of making the joke.”

Still, when her video went viral, many viewers were upset, by both the visuals and the audio, suggesting it encouraged mockery of those with disfigurements. “They were saying this filter, this entire trend, is very harmful,” she says. “They were saying: ‘You’re making fun. Imagine people who actually do look bad, like, this could hurt them’.”

@jewishmagician

This one personally hurt my feelings

♬ original sound - Liv

Symmetry filters can and do trouble people of all types and appearance. Olivia Alicandri, a 22-year-old stage crew worker for Blue Man Group in New York City, greeted the arrival of a new TikTok effect with a tongue-in-cheek “Guys, new body dysmorphia filter just dropped!”.

“Whether it makes you look better or it makes you realise that you don’t look exactly how you thought you did, TikTok and Instagram filters have been, like, a window into body dysmorphia,” she says in an interview. “You are viewing yourself incorrectly, and then you are bounced back into reality, where you look not like Gigi Hadid or whoever.”

Journalists have been documenting this phenomenon, addressing the deleterious mental health effects of seeing yourself as others see you and offering ways to cope with the new self-knowledge. Many articles treat the issue as a kind of trauma, another example of the bodily insecurity the internet provokes, which some call “filter dysmorphia”.

That said, the current obsession with symmetry may emerge from something older and deeper than any of these triggers. The human fascination with symmetry is an ancient phenomenon, with vast cultural and biological implications, which helps explain the strong emotions being expressed on social media.

Beauty has always invited quantification and assessment. Aristotle believed that “the chief forms of beauty are order and symmetry”. Vitruvius, architect of the ancient Roman world, compared the beauty of a symmetrical temple to the beauty of a symmetrical person. Leonardo da Vinci created his famous Vitruvian Man drawing in 1490, representing a nude human figure of ideal and symmetric proportions, demonstrating the mathematical constraints posited by Vitruvius, known as the “golden ratio”.

Leonardo da Vinci created the Vitruvian Man in the late 15th century as a demonstration of the ideal proportions of the human body. Photograph: Gabriel Bouys/ Getty Images
Leonardo da Vinci created the Vitruvian Man in the late 15th century as a demonstration of the ideal proportions of the human body. Photograph: Gabriel Bouys/ Getty Images

The concept of symmetry helps us see connections between the design of our human lives and the entire rest of creation, a link between human beauty and the intricate workings of nature, biology, mathematics and physics. Scientists have found that animals seek out symmetry in potential mates. Birds need symmetrical wings to fly. Symmetrical legs help human beings walk.

Symmetry is even critical to modern physics. As Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, chair of astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History, explains in an email, “even Einstein’s theories of special and general relativity rely on symmetry, with respect to relative velocity or to the very bending of space-time”.

And so, some of the social media obsession with symmetry may actually be surging up from an ancient imperative that once privileged symmetry (and maybe still does).

Some scientists who study beauty have long maintained this. In her 1999 book, Survival of the Prettiest, Harvard psychology professor Nancy Etcoff argues that regardless of culture or ethnicity, all human beings love and are drawn to beauty. “The more symmetry a body has, the more attractive it is,” she says in an interview. “We find something ‘wrong’ with even slight asymmetries.” While styles of beauty change over time, she says, many people “want to look at something close to perfect or without obvious flaws”.

A slew of filters on social media allow users to evaluate their features, reigniting age-old obsessions with perfection and beauty. Illustration: Miki Kim/The New York Times
A slew of filters on social media allow users to evaluate their features, reigniting age-old obsessions with perfection and beauty. Illustration: Miki Kim/The New York Times

Is it unfair or wrong to dissect beauty in this way? Is it un-feminist (given how much more time and energy women tend to devote to their appearance)? Maybe. But for Prof Etcoff, cultural interpretations are beside the point. “Some things,” she says, are instinctual. “We’re capable of rising above our instinct, but it’s part of human nature.” DNA, she notes, was “the original symmetry producer”.

Given this, it’s unsurprising that those who work in beauty culture are often as interested in symmetry as Aristotle and Vitruvius ever were. According to Dr Stafford Broumand, a plastic surgeon in New York City: “Most people are asymmetric. There are some models who have incredible facial symmetry, and when you see them, it takes your breath away. Why are they so strikingly beautiful? That’s part of it, that striking symmetry.” (Which models in particular? Broumand demurred. “They might even be my patients.”)

Dr Gervaise Gerstner, a cosmetic dermatologist in New York, also connects symmetry with the Vitruvian concept of the golden ratio. “I use that in my exam room,” she says.

As examples of the most symmetrical famous faces, Dr Gerstner cited Grace Kelly (whose photo hangs in her office), Kim Kardashian, Beyoncé and the Mona Lisa. “Da Vinci was the king of geometry,” she says.

While Dr Gerstner says older patients rarely mention social media filters, they do fret over facial imbalance. “We talk about their asymmetries,” she says. These can include pigment variations, the uneven flattening created by side sleeping, underlying anatomical differences and, of course, ageing, which causes volume loss that “can exacerbate asymmetry”. Dr Gerstner treats her patients with these concerns by using combinations of lasers, brightening creams, micro-needling and fillers.

Kuma, a make-up artist in the world of high fashion (who uses only one name), pays close attention to symmetry. “I try to balance the face,” he says. “I check the height of the eyebrow, each point where they start, the top, the end. I put the make-up brush horizontally on each of these points to check the positions of the eyebrows.”

Kuma, in fact, uses symmetry filters as professional tools. “There is an app which flips your face,” he says. “That shows people their actual face, and it’s totally different from what you see in a mirror. So, I use the app and check your face.”

But isn’t it rather soulless to reduce our singular, precious faces to equations and ratios? What about the charm of imperfection? Drew Barrymore’s adorably crooked smile? Ellen Barkin’s sexy off-kilter features? Cindy Crawford’s mole? “All things are literally better, lovelier, and more beloved for the imperfections which have been divinely appointed,” 19th-century British thinker John Ruskin wrote in The Stones of Venice. As Prof Etcoff acknowledges, “the oddity, the rarity, the uniqueness of a person can be extremely attractive”.

'Kintsugi is an aesthetic principle that celebrates breakage and imperfection rather than concealing or rejecting it'. Photograph: Rozette Rago/The New York Times
'Kintsugi is an aesthetic principle that celebrates breakage and imperfection rather than concealing or rejecting it'. Photograph: Rozette Rago/The New York Times

We can find corroboration for this in an art form dating to 15th-century Japan. The Greeks may have prized perfection, but the ancient Japanese tradition of kintsugi (meaning “joining with gold”) pursued quite different ideals. Kintsugi, which grew in popularity in the 17th century, is the craft of repairing broken ceramics by filling a crack with lacquer and then highlighting the “scar” with powdered gold, platinum or silver.

“Kintsugi is an aesthetic principle that celebrates breakage and imperfection rather than concealing or rejecting it,” says Petya Andreeva, a professor of Asian art history at Parsons School of Design. “It’s derived from the Buddhist doctrine of wabi-sabi, which emphasises the impermanence of the material world, as well as the transience of the human experience. The wabi-sabi aesthetic advocates for rough or uneven finishes, and asymmetry.”

Contemplating kintsugi may not offer immediate comfort to the distressed young people on social media, or to any of us who are weary of our own faces on video chats. But it does offer valuable perspective, especially considered in light of philosophies that claim we have “natural” or instinctual needs for symmetry. At heart, these are not so much divergent views as they are two ways of looking at one phenomenon.

Whether you love and seek symmetry (let’s call this the Vitruvian side) or revere and celebrate its absence (the kintsugi side), you are seeking some kind of harmony in the face of rupture or conflict. And seeking to make sense of the world and its images is, in fact, a noble quest with a long history. – This article originally appeared in The New York Times.