| PortraitQuest | ||||
The Mona Lisa |
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Name of Painting- Mona Lisa/ La Gioconda Artist- Leonardo Da Vinci Year Painted- 1053-1506 Style- Renaissance |
Portrait of Mona Lisa (1479-1528), also
known as La Gioconda, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo; 1503-06 (150
Kb); Oil on wood, 77 x 53 cm (30 x 20 7/8 in); Musee du Louvre, Paris
If we now return to the Mona Lisa, we may understand something
of its mysterious effect. We see that Leonardo has used the means of
his 'sfumato' with the utmost deliberation. Everyone who has ever tried
to draw or scribble a face knows that what we call its expression rests
mainly in two features: the corners of the mouth, and the corners of
the eyes. Now it is precisely these parts which Leonardo has left deliberately
indistinct, by letting them merge into a soft shadow. That is why we
are never quite certain in what mood Mona Lisa is really looking at
us. Her expression always seems just to elude us. It is not only vagueness,
of course, which produces this effect. There is much more behind it.
Leonardo has done a very daring thing, which perhaps only a painter
of his consummate mastery could risk. If we look carefully at the picture,
we see that the two sides do not quite match. This is most obvious in
the fantastic dream landscape in the background. The horizon on the
left side seems to lie much lower than the one on the right. Consequently,
when we focus on the left side of the picture, the woman looks somehow
taller or more erect than if we focus on the right side. And her face,
too, seems to change with this change of position, because, even here,
the two sides do not quite match.
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| created by Jujhaar and Yusei | ||||