2. Why the Mona Lisa is so Famous
The Mona Lisa, painted by Italian artist
Leonardo Da Vinci, is arguably the most famous
painting of all time. Six million people visit the
Louvre in France every year to view it (Canetti,
n.d.). Many copies have been made of it. Songs and
movies and books have referenced it, including the
recent phenomenon, The Da Vinci Code, which
increased traffic at the Louvre so
much that the workers went on
strike out of sheer frustration
(Bremmer, Tourres, 2007). It is
estimated that the Mona Lisa is
used commercially in some new
way every week (Puente, 2006).
How did this painting become so
famous? The fame of the Mona
Lisa began because it is an extraordinarily good
painting by an artist who was a renowned genius, it
grew because it gained the attention of kings and
that world-class art museum, the Louvre, and it
exploded due to a series of near catastrophes,
critics, and exploitations.
Leonardo Da Vinci was renowned as an
inventive and artistic genius long before he painted
the Mona Lisa, and his fame drew wide attention to
his art. His reputation as a genius was well-
deserved. Leonardo lived his motto, “He is a poor
pupil who does not surpass his master” and is said
to have surpassed not only his masters, but all his
contemporaries in each of the many arts and
disciplines to which he committed himself (Potter,
2006, ¶ 3). Leonardo researched anatomy to perfect
his art. He dissected animal and human cadavers to
learn the muscle and skeletal
structure and made copious drawings
and notes. He studied perspective,
the sky and atmosphere, and the way
light falls on curved surfaces and,
based on these studies, refined his
painting methods. Although only a
few of his paintings survive today,
his work is still admired by experts
(Potter, 2006). The Mona Lisa was one of his last
paintings, and although the work is only 30 inches
tall and 21 inches wide, he spent four years
completing it. In this painting, all his skill is
evident.
The rendition of the model in the Mona Lisa
is anatomically perfect. The lighting makes the skin
look so real that one critic said “” (Potter, 2006, ¶
As art may imitate
nature, she does not
appear to be painted,
but truly of flesh and
blood. On looking
closely at the pit of
her throat, one could
swear that the pulses
were beating
3. 8). He used such thin layers of paint that no one has
figured out how he did it (Jozefowicz, 2007). In this
painting, Leonardo employed a method described
by Pliny that many other artists have attempted and
none have perfected as Leonardo did (Canetti, n.d.).
Art critics call it sfumato, which is Italian for
“smoky”. It involves the use of miniscule brush
strokes to create subtle transitions between light and
dark and between colors. The work was so far
beyond current methods, that it was received with
astonishment by all who saw it and attracted great
attention (Potter, 2006).
Soon after the splash created by Mona Lisa,
Francois I, king of France, invited Leonardo to the
palace at Fontainebleau under his patronage. Five
years later Leonardo died, leaving the portrait to his
friend. Francois hung it
prominently in his semi-private
gallery in the palace where it
gained the attention of visitors
from all over Europe. There
Mona Lisa acquired an aura of the femme fatale,
perhaps because part of the gallery was in the king’s
boudoir (Mona Lisa, n.d.). Francois’ art collection
formed the foundation of what eventually became
the Louvre Museum which opened in 1793 (Mona
Lisa, n.d.). Except for some time hidden in a
warehouse during the French Revolution, Mona
Lisa held court in the Louvre almost without
interruption. She did spend a few years in
Napoleon’s bedroom (Meanley, 2006), but when he
was exiled she returned to the Louvre. In that vast
museum, which now covers 49 acres, thousands of
visitors have seen her nearly every day for more
than 200 years (Mona Lisa, n.d.). Her royal
connections and her high visibility in the Louvre
might have been enough to maintain her fame, but a
near disaster escalated her popularity off the charts.
In 1910, Theophile Homolle, the director of
the National Museums, said that stealing the Mona
Lisa from the Louvre was impossible. “You might
as well pretend that one could steal the towers of
Notre Dame!” he claimed (Mona
Lisa, n.d., p. 7). When Mona Lisa
disappeared on August 21, 1911,
France was shocked. For two years,
they searched for their national
treasure. Authorities questioned and fired museum
employees, accused foreign governments and
business tycoons of publicity stunts, and even
brought in Pablo Picasso for questioning. Buffoons
made jokes, cartoons, riddles, and songs about
When the Mona Lisa
disappeared, France
was shocked.
4. Mona Lisa. Someone circulated postcards which
depicted Leonardo taking her out of France
thumbing her nose at Parisians (Mona Lisa, n.d.).
The Louvre and various journals offered rewards to
fortune tellers to foretell what had become of her
(Mona Lisa, n.d.). One of them, perhaps inspired by
the fresh disaster of the Titanic, declared that she
had been thrown into the sea. But,
unlike the “unsinkable” Titanic,
the Mona Lisa’s journey was not
over.
On December 10, 1913, a
patriotic Italian named Vincenzo
Perugia, a former Louvre employee, attempted to
sell her to an antique dealer in Italy and was
apprehended (Mona Lisa, n.d.). He said he wished
to return the Mona Lisa to her home country. The
Italians enjoyed a brief reunion with her before
returning her to the Louvre. They didn’t punish
Perugia very hard.
The subsequent rise in fame of the Mona
Lisa made her a target for modern artists such as
Marcel Duchamp and Salvador Dali who were
weary of the tyranny of the classical style (Potter,
2006). Both men painted her with a moustache.
Even the villainy increased her popularity (Puente,
2006). She also became a target for vandals. In
1956, someone spilled acid on the painting and
damaged it badly (Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa,
2006). Just a few months later a young man threw a
rock at it which created a small nick. These
incidents resulted in even stronger security for the
increasingly precious Mona Lisa.
As the fame and value of the
Mona Lisa increased, it was not
surprising that, in 1963, First Lady
Jacqueline Kennedy asked to bring
her to the United States. It was also
not surprising that the request raised
much consternation. But, Francophile that she was,
Jacque was popular with the French and secured
permission for a seven-week tour in New York City
and Washington, D.C. On that tour, more than one
and a half million people saw the famous painting.
In 1974, more than two million people saw her on a
tour through Tokyo and Moscow. Ever since then,
people have been collecting “Monalisiana” (Puente,
2006). Leonardo’s famous lady has appeared in
advertising and promotion for everything
imaginable. Clearly, Mona Lisa’s colorful past has
earned her superstar status.
Leonardo’s famous
lady has appears in
advertising and
promotion for
everything
imaginable.
5. The famous Leonardo Da Vinci has been
called a true Renaissance man, a genius. Few people
have genius in both art and science, but Leonardo
did, and for him it was natural to study science to
figure out how to produce his art. Little wonder that
he should be the man to produce a painting good
enough to become the world’s most famous.
Mimicked and studied by contemporaries, adulated
by kings, romanticized by the crowds in the Louvre,
abused and exploited and narrowly escaping
disaster more than once, the Mona Lisa has become
the most famous painting of all time. With such a
combination of factors one wonders whether
another work could ever surpass her popularity.
References
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Lisa becomes a picture of misery.
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