The Strange Attraction Of The Mona Lisa | The Secret of Mona Lisa

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 373

  • @PerspectiveArts
    @PerspectiveArts  2 года назад +3

    📺 It's like Netflix for history! Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service, and enjoy a discount on us: bit.ly/3uQ15zU

  • @robertcaffrey6097
    @robertcaffrey6097 2 года назад +91

    This is fantastic, especially when I consider that as an 8 yr old child myself I bought my own mother a framed print copy of the Mona Lisa painting as a gift for her. It still hangs in her house to this day almost 50 yrs later.

    • @pediredlanirmala6933
      @pediredlanirmala6933 Год назад

      but what if your mother comes to know now that the gift she received was not of monalisa but some different named painting😄😄.. from jagadeesh pediredla

  • @sheilabarron5532
    @sheilabarron5532 2 года назад +19

    I was 14 yrs old when I seen her in a world magazine I remember just gazing in her eyes they took me somewhere and it was AMAZING Thank ya for sharing Beauty ✌❤

    • @eneseusm459
      @eneseusm459 2 года назад +2

      No offense. But do you wear glasses? because if this is ideal beauty to people, they must be blind because there's more beautiful women way better looking than the Mona Lisa.

    • @Elizabeth-yg2mg
      @Elizabeth-yg2mg 2 года назад +3

      500 years ago there was no mascara, brow makeup or lipstick-- different standards.

    • @eneseusm459
      @eneseusm459 2 года назад +1

      @@Elizabeth-yg2mg not really

    • @eneseusm459
      @eneseusm459 2 года назад +1

      @@Elizabeth-yg2mg as in there are women out there that dont need makeup to look beautiful.

    • @jackholman5008
      @jackholman5008 2 года назад +1

      😂😂😂

  • @sharonletchford9375
    @sharonletchford9375 2 года назад +11

    The feeling that you ve been restoring one of the originals must have been overwhelming.
    It's amazing the way they used to ground up minerals to form a couler.

  • @Danny30011980
    @Danny30011980 3 года назад +29

    But oil colours can darken over time, I'm sure the colours were more vibrant when it was just completed. So the dress isn't neccessarily dark and colours of someone dead or in grief. Possible that the colours were lighter back then. And I also read that the Gherardini's and Leonardo DaVinci were once neighbours in Florence. Also there were apparently two paintings of the same subject, two Mona Lisa's/La Gioconda's. It's still disputed which was the initial one

    • @tonythomas6847
      @tonythomas6847 2 года назад +4

      In a video by the channel The Great Art Explained, they shows actual Mona Lisa with what may have been it's real colors. Its very beautiful.

  • @milagros505
    @milagros505 2 года назад +7

    Leonardo Da Vinci,a gift of God to a painter to Us.

  • @GeoffLogie
    @GeoffLogie Год назад +5

    The appeal, fascination and mystery of the Mona Lisa is that it depicts a woman under the spell of unrequited love…this is the genius of Leonardo in this instance, his ability to capture such interior emotional complexes. We the observers of such art have a natural fascination for such human dilemmas frozen in expression on the canvas for us to study and witness, a soul in torment and yet animated by the magic of love.

    • @doreekaplan2589
      @doreekaplan2589 Год назад

      Not to me.
      I see an unattractive black painting dislike utterly. We saw it in 1965 without glass an again in 1981 . Disliked it as much years later

    • @seanfaherty
      @seanfaherty 6 месяцев назад

      Does it ? how could you possibly know what is in the mind of few thousandths of an inch of paint ?
      All those emotions come from you.
      That is the magic of Leonardo

  • @nickmandleberg
    @nickmandleberg 2 года назад +62

    The painting only became legendary in 1911 after it was stolen from the Louvre. Before then there was nothing to distinguish it from Da Vinci's other works on display there and it received no special reverence.
    The sensational media hype surrounding the heist spread across the globe and created a legendary masterpiece yet those who flock to see it have no idea why it is deemed so special.

    • @celestebredin6213
      @celestebredin6213 2 года назад +2

      True🤪

    • @teeskyers
      @teeskyers 2 года назад +3

      That's exactly why I'm wondering why this video isn't about that right from the start

    • @firstlast2636
      @firstlast2636 2 года назад

      Fake news! Delete this!

    • @verdeazul333
      @verdeazul333 2 года назад

      Saw it at Louvre. It was underwhelming. Puny, actually. Probably the most overrated work of art.

    • @mondriaa
      @mondriaa 2 года назад +5

      that is mostly BS, think about if it was nothing special its not worth stealing, it is true its was not really known by the general public but that was also the case with almost all paintings

  • @holliepilet9677
    @holliepilet9677 Год назад +1

    Pure and genuine Energy ❣️ 👽✨🍃🌈 Leonardo was a visionary genius 💌💜

  • @KingCircles
    @KingCircles 9 месяцев назад

    Beautiful, beautiful painting. 🖼🖼🎨🎨

  • @hayesjennife
    @hayesjennife 2 года назад +5

    The story of de Medici and his son makes more sense to me than the silk merchant's wife synopsis because Leonardo was a celebrity in his time. Why didn't the merchant pursue Leo the painting. There is not a note of compensation simply a notation that he did agree to complete a painting for them. I am incline to believe that Salai delivered the painting to them when he returned to Milan. Leonardo was able to keep the "mothers painting" after de Medici unexpectantly died.

  • @Survivor-mf1nm
    @Survivor-mf1nm 3 года назад +34

    This was fascinating!!! I would love to see more such in depth documentaries on additional works of art.

  • @MrDXRamirez
    @MrDXRamirez 2 года назад +14

    The ‘Portrait of a Mother’ painted by the master in one session from start to finish and with only one change in the pinky of her hand is profoundly remarkable.

    • @zhylviawardzon1933
      @zhylviawardzon1933 2 года назад

      Yap! It didn't happen overnight, but it happened 7 years, a lot of sacrifices, but It's finished! It's indeed remarkable.

    • @MrDXRamirez
      @MrDXRamirez 2 года назад +2

      @@zhylviawardzon1933 Then you are challenging the forensics in the video that says it was painted in one session?

    • @zhylviawardzon1933
      @zhylviawardzon1933 2 года назад

      @@MrDXRamirez That's not what I'm talking about! That means you don't know the story. It's okay.

    • @NickVenture1
      @NickVenture1 2 года назад +1

      HELLO. Actually if the painting was really done in "one session" without many changes.. this is not such a good sign! In this movie they talk about a minor change only with a couple fingers. But I also read that there are in fact several other changes which occurred during the making of the painting. There is a book about this published by a french who scanned the canvas. They actually show some scenes in this movie where we can see exactly this camera in action.. but for some reason they do not mention anything about this laboratory. "Lumiere Society" in Paris. Maybe for copyright reasons? Or I did not notice..
      Paintings which turn out to have been created without much or no petimenti at all (changes in the lay out which occurs during the creation of an artwork) are often suspected to be replicas of an original. You understand that an artist.. either the author himself or a copier will just paint exactly what he can already see. Because he will have a sample right in view to make another painting. By the way it is exactly the same when the original author of a painting is making a double for himself or another client. He will not have to start from scratch and there will be less changes of course.. visible under the finished surface. Example is also Vincent van Gogh who definitely painted several times the same portraits. There was developed a kind of algorithm technology for art expertise which is able to differentiate the movements of the artist's hand by scanning the brushstrokes of a painted surface. And it turned out that the Artificial Intelligence was able to differentiate the painting done as the first original creation from the other versions where the artist was moving his brush in a different way.. because his attention focuses on another painting which he just needs to replicate. Most interesting development's thanks to some teams busy in the Netherlands doing this kind of research. This can even help in the future to discover the background stories of paintings by getting the brush stroke profile of a certain artist according to certain periods of their creative life. So maybe the Mona Lisa of the Louvre just turns out to be a duplicate made by the master himself of another earlier version which should have probably a couple petimenti under the surface.. something which can still be discovered. I think there are already some rumors because of the reduction of certain elements in the composition of the Louvre painting in comparison to some other painting where a wall or something like this appears. Window frame or such.. don't remember precisely now. But definitely there are more stories to be considered here and that book can give much more info than the film we see here.
      Book author is named "Coste" Maybe Patrick Coste?

    • @alexechoz
      @alexechoz 2 года назад +1

      @@zhylviawardzon1933 Maybe you can explain the story? Many of us here know only what is in this video, which clearly states it was painted in one session. It seems unlikely, but it is repeated three times in the length of this - if there is a further story, as you assure us there is, we need a link to the follow up video, or for you to enlighten us here.

  • @NickVenture1
    @NickVenture1 2 года назад +31

    There is the "Naked Mona Lisa" painted by one of Leonardo's assistants. Quite funny. They must have had fun in his atelier creating parodies of the Master's custom orders.

    • @stephaniepage4334
      @stephaniepage4334 2 года назад +2

      I agreed

    • @bigtoelittlefinger6133
      @bigtoelittlefinger6133 2 года назад +1

      So do I heehee

    • @ripsumrall8018
      @ripsumrall8018 2 года назад +1

      Latest research is attributing the work to Leonardo, not a student.

    • @ripsumrall8018
      @ripsumrall8018 2 года назад +2

      atelier thanks for a new word to me :)

    • @NickVenture1
      @NickVenture1 2 года назад +2

      @@ripsumrall8018 Good news. I always hope that advances in technology and science will allow art experts to get additional evidence confirming or disconfirming the pedigree of artworks. And reduce the part of so called "connoiseurship" to the reasonable amount in combination with increasingly more clear cut scientific evidence.

  • @mikeyoung9810
    @mikeyoung9810 2 года назад +12

    Maybe Leonardo just saw her and was moved by her beauty so he painted her for himself. I read somewhere that he carried the painting with him and worked on it over time. The final image may be just his memory of her.

  • @nds-naibdrawingschannel7303
    @nds-naibdrawingschannel7303 2 года назад +2

    There is laughter, but there is no laughter, but there is

  • @chalerms1
    @chalerms1 3 года назад +5

    This doc does not mention the twin Monna Lisa which belongs to the Prada Museum in Madrid at all. I saw both paintings at the Louvre and I believe there's more to it.

  • @EmilyKresl
    @EmilyKresl 2 года назад +2

    I liked the old unsolved mysteries answer to this where it was a self portrait In drag

  • @bookmouse2719
    @bookmouse2719 3 года назад +2

    Leonardo was famous for his searching for better and new paint materials and would change techniques and materials in his quest. This is one of the reasons why the Last Supper was crumpling, also he didn't follow proper fresco painting methods.

  • @thebxchange
    @thebxchange 3 года назад +10

    I was quite critical of Waldemar's style in presenting: too much pomp. However, I seem to be only watching his videos because he adds so much more information to give you the star of where styles began and ended. Consistent is the frivolity of people looking for the latest craze to imply status. Just demonstrates the lack of depth most people with money have. Waldemar videos are entertains, but also very informative. Thanks so much for the great work, and time, it must have taken to do these.
    Search Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci: Great Art Explained. Another interesting video.

    • @Preservestlandry
      @Preservestlandry 3 года назад +4

      It is a BCC TV show. If you want a lecture, go to college.

    • @warwickkingmaker2035
      @warwickkingmaker2035 2 года назад +1

      @@Preservestlandry hahaha I agree

    • @dshe8637
      @dshe8637 2 года назад +1

      This is different presenter

    • @rockalot1635
      @rockalot1635 2 года назад

      Look at comment by rockalot. Obtain a poster of monalisa so u can cut it. Cut the women out at shoulders, leaving the background to look at, line the 1/2 circles. You should be able to see a number of things. If interested just comment to my public comment.

  • @Tyme4t2
    @Tyme4t2 2 года назад +3

    One of the attractions of the Mona Lisa was her smile. When you looked at her, you could not tell if she was smiling or not. From the time the Mandela Effect started happening, you can clearly see the picture has now changed to her smiling. Now, her smile is shown with an upward position. Her smile is no longer an attraction to the painting because there is nothing to ponder about her smile anymore.

    • @Known-unknowns
      @Known-unknowns Год назад +1

      I know a dentist who assures me her enigmatic smile is due to lack of teeth. 😊

  • @StephiSensei26
    @StephiSensei26 2 года назад +1

    Highly provocative and heart rendering study. 5 Stars!

  • @toniomalley5661
    @toniomalley5661 2 года назад +2

    I think it’s his mother’s face as he remembers her

  • @islandbirdw
    @islandbirdw 2 года назад +12

    We stood in line inside The Louvre surrounded by countless works of art, just to see it behind security glass up close for a max of 10 minutes. Understanding that Leonardo DaVinci was the first to introduce dimension to his paintings. Up to this point all paintings were only 2 dimensional, that was until L DaVinci.

    • @cruisepaige
      @cruisepaige 2 года назад +2

      Um, no. I think you mean perspective but you are incorrect either way.

    • @islandbirdw
      @islandbirdw 2 года назад +1

      @@cruisepaige I guess you know better than the museum which is where I learned about in Washington DC.

  • @brendawarren4113
    @brendawarren4113 2 года назад +8

    I've heard it said it's a self portrait. Lots of his paintings are self portraits.

  • @willoojorge
    @willoojorge Год назад

    Great 👌 understanding

  • @GreatGreebo
    @GreatGreebo 2 года назад +65

    Imagine being hired to restore an old, inexpensive “copy” painting only to discover it was actually painted by DaVinci himself….WOW 😳

    • @josephinemarino389
      @josephinemarino389 2 года назад +1

      Does anyone else notice all his portrait faces of women are similar. 1

    • @SUBJECTISOLDMOVEON
      @SUBJECTISOLDMOVEON 2 года назад +2

      yep it was a common practice to paint one self from boredom within the castle walls. you can say it has a transgender look. the king of france hired him and pretty much all painters in the region who had a nack for colors to stay and play inside the court yards while men found themselves admiring each other. they still dont know when he started or finished the painting somewhere around 1503 to who knows when. you could only imagine what else was presented to the young lad leo besides holding the gold in his hands running naked in the hall ways daily and the inbreeding tatics that was practiced throughout europe even right up to the royals we see today they are all cousins lol. if you really want to know who ruled that country france during them days it was the kings mother and sister. he bowed to them when he spoke on any matter that was worth saying. i love some mental women knowing how to use persuasive ways to happiness ;)

    • @SUBJECTISOLDMOVEON
      @SUBJECTISOLDMOVEON 2 года назад

      want more government conspiracies? dick gregory right here on youtube.

  • @josephlloyd9636
    @josephlloyd9636 Год назад

    My first time at the Louvre in Paris I almost missed seeing the Mona Lisa..💯💞😁

  • @faizanlhr
    @faizanlhr 2 года назад

    Amazing facts which i want to know about this painting. Nice information i found here

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery 2 года назад +1

      Did you notice the mole next to her eye?

    • @faizanlhr
      @faizanlhr 2 года назад

      @@appletongallery no

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery 2 года назад

      @@faizanlhr It’s in between the eye and the nose. It’s a new development.

  • @josepcivil8090
    @josepcivil8090 Год назад +2

    If this painting hides a secret, it’s who the character really represented in it is. And this character is by no means Lisa Gherardini as we are told, but Isabella of Aragon y Sforza, the daughter of King Afonso II of Naples and companion of Leonardo da Vinci after the death of Isabella’s first husband, according to what the German historian Maike Vogt-Lüerssen tells us.

  • @NinivehGaia
    @NinivehGaia 2 года назад +2

    I'm crying 😭 the theory of it is extremely beautiful ❤️ and compelling. Are they going to persuade the Louvre of changing the name?

  • @terrancemiller8350
    @terrancemiller8350 2 года назад +3

    How absolutely brilliant, it just makes you wonder.

  • @sl7883
    @sl7883 2 года назад +1

    2:12 they show da vinci slaving over a completely finished mona lisa including cracked varnish and aggressive overcleaning

  • @vincentlussier8264
    @vincentlussier8264 Год назад

    We know next to sweet bugger all about Mona Lisa . We weren't there beside Leonardo when he painted it. So we couldnt say "Hey leo, you got her smile down realgood"! And we didn't see Mona get out of her seat say , "Oh my God Leo, that looks just like me but the color of my shawl is a little more maroon than that !

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut 2 года назад +1

    46:35 "He was born in 1452 on a farm.
    His birth house still stand today.
    It's located amidst an olive grove
    near the small Tuscan village of Vinci " B-)

  • @M.2018-b3f
    @M.2018-b3f 2 года назад

    Brilliant! Thank you.

  • @sagarkunwar3976
    @sagarkunwar3976 9 месяцев назад +1

    Jai Parvati Mata ❣❣

  • @Blackfoxparadox
    @Blackfoxparadox 2 года назад +5

    What’s more fascinating is that her identity was a mystery. Now we’ve always known who she is

  • @JMH912
    @JMH912 5 месяцев назад +1

    The Mona Lisa is a portrait of Mary Magdalene. Time doesn’t exist and she has returned! Jesus and Adam painted this for her our daughter.

  • @rosenamdensuden
    @rosenamdensuden 2 года назад +2

    That Giaconda smile.

  • @tobycunningham797
    @tobycunningham797 3 года назад +37

    I can’t help thinking that “who was Mona Lisa?” is one of the least most interesting questions about this painting, and what difference would it make if we knew? The meaning, interest, intrigue isn’t in the subject but the way it is depicted

    • @CorkBouldering
      @CorkBouldering 3 года назад +1

      painting is often called gioconda so answer is simple - sure waste of time i am skipping this one.

    • @judiesuh6858
      @judiesuh6858 3 года назад

      I agree!

    • @user-xv9pb1fs5w
      @user-xv9pb1fs5w 3 года назад

      @Jeremy Mettler that was profound!

    • @Eudaimonia88
      @Eudaimonia88 3 года назад

      @@user-xv9pb1fs5w 🤣🤣

    • @pyranie
      @pyranie 3 года назад

      lol lll

  • @cocotanya31
    @cocotanya31 2 года назад +1

    My mother been to Paris in the 60s she told me the original Mona Lisa is not on display. No one never took a picture of it because of the flash might destroy it.she said the background of the original painting is solid colors no Valleys or mountains or rivers.

    • @toddaulner5393
      @toddaulner5393 2 года назад

      Hmm, I guess it could have been painted over? I need to figure that out.

  • @barbaraolson600
    @barbaraolson600 2 года назад +1

    Leonardo May have had many models and clients. Enjoy the talent, creativity.

    • @appletongallery
      @appletongallery 2 года назад

      Did you notice the mole next to her eye?

  • @paulmartin9496
    @paulmartin9496 2 года назад +5

    Interesting new information, discoveries. Plausible with one exception... if you have ever painted sfumato you know how extremely difficult it is and can take years. To think this painting is Alla prima is ridiculous. Try painting with walnut oil and real vermillion and see how long it takes to dry. The key that makes this story plausible is only one missing piece of the puzzle...and a step short of thorough research. One must remember that Leonardo was a visionary, a Renaissance tech geek. His work was revolutionary and altered our perception of the true power of art. Now think about that happening in the 1400's. It wouldn't take much to blow you away. But he was radical... out with tempura even though Michelangelo had perfected it. Oil and the principles he wrote about painting didn't exist until he wrote them down. His paintings were all new and frankly still are. We have yet to get close to him. Try painting a living presence. Anyone. So, long story short, these 'chroniclers' thought it was unfinished when in actuality it was finished. The treatment of the sky, the mountains, the landscape in comparison to the Mona Lisa is very different... his theories are coming out. They wouldn't have understood what they were looking at. Modern scholars are still trying to figure it out. The truth is he painted it all... who else could? He did it over years and kept it with him. Every true artist has one they complain is never done but they just want to keep it. So with that assumption puzzle and theory complete. It was not unfinished, they just thought it was.

  • @rowenadinsmore1
    @rowenadinsmore1 2 года назад +1

    There is a replica in Madrid by one of his students.

  • @jeanettecameron7530
    @jeanettecameron7530 2 года назад +4

    She has a memorable serene face. I was much more impressed by the Degas pastel ballerinas at Musee D'Orsay

  • @juliettasker9883
    @juliettasker9883 2 года назад +2

    I had a sixth sense that the Mona Lisa was the mother of Leonardo Da Vinci.
    I came to that conclusion by a process of elimination but I do not want to bore you with my understanding of this portrait and you may think this is the contemplation of a madwoman!!??

    • @rustyfox81
      @rustyfox81 2 года назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing !

  • @BlodaBlodaBloda
    @BlodaBlodaBloda 2 года назад

    Mind blowing!!!

  • @minnie8397
    @minnie8397 2 года назад +1

    Why did the Mona Lisa smile ? Because she was a first time pregnant women who had not told any one yet. That's where she gets that cat who ate the canary smile and the dreamy look in her eyes. Never before been caught on portrait or and has never been caught on film.

  • @DizzyCsango
    @DizzyCsango 2 года назад +4

    When you see Leonardo working on the Mona Lisa the painting is already cracked!

  • @parishaydaressences3359
    @parishaydaressences3359 2 года назад

    Lovely

  • @sebastianaachen7697
    @sebastianaachen7697 2 года назад +7

    But oil colours can darken over time, I'm sure the colours were more vibrant when it was just completed. So the dress isn't neccessarily dark and colours of someone dead or in grief. Possible that the colours were lighter

    • @wayofthewonderer
      @wayofthewonderer 2 года назад

      Yes, but they don't change colour.

    • @dshe8637
      @dshe8637 2 года назад

      Why is this comment a copy of one from 5 months ago?

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno 2 года назад +3

    It's a self portrait. I painted a full beard over a reproduction, its resemblance to a later self portrait as an old man is remarkable.

  • @conniedockreyhetzel5970
    @conniedockreyhetzel5970 2 года назад +4

    I don't like the part where they start guessing who she can be now

  • @theresagonzalez4924
    @theresagonzalez4924 2 года назад +5

    I think this portrait was a figure that the painter visualize on the canvas and he just became inspired by the figure that was imagined. Some times. I see an image in the floor title and then I draw it. I think Leonardo just gave the portrait the name Mona Lisa. I don't think she was anyone or she was the perfect woman that he created for himself
    I don't he every found his perfect Woman

  • @agapelove1111
    @agapelove1111 2 года назад +1

    Mona Lisa is a portrait of Mary Magdalene. Salvatore Mondi was Jesus's portrait. Leonardo DaVinci painted from memory. He was Jesus in a pastlife.
    Mary Magdalene was Jesus's wife. She was pregnant with twins. A girl and a boy when Jesus was Crucified. The son was Jesus reincarnated.
    We are Twin Flames. Two halves of the same soul.
    Today he is 28 years old. Minus the beard and wrinkles... He is a singer and musician. I was Mary Magdalene and I am nearly 46. Psychic Medium, and Mother of 5 at present.
    Everyone keeps waiting for the resurrection of Jesus, but he has resurrected many, many times. He was also Nikola Tesla 1856-1943. I was a French Actress who was named Sarah Bernhardt 1844-1923.
    My counterpart and I can most likely crack the codes.
    The battle painting was most likely his lifetime as Alexander the Great, or possibly his lifetime as King David. The painting of Saint John the Baptist was a painting of our son, who was Jesus reincarnated. I think he looks like us both. Our daughter was one of the unfinished works.

  • @sagarkunwar3976
    @sagarkunwar3976 9 месяцев назад +1

    Har Har Mahadev ❣❣

  • @cruisepaige
    @cruisepaige 2 года назад +2

    German guy: how did we miss stealing this one during the war?

  • @friendlybaby1
    @friendlybaby1 2 года назад +1

    "Labours of Love"? I think we've got to a point in time where we can call a spade a spade

  • @edwardoneil3962
    @edwardoneil3962 3 года назад +3

    The Mona lisa in the Louvre is the original and one and only. No painting could ever have such power if it were not. The proof is always in the pudding.

    • @mitsuomits9077
      @mitsuomits9077 2 года назад +1

      Actually, the painting that's in exhibition at the Louvre is an exact copy. The original is also at the Louvre, but they keep it in an other place to avoid any attempt of robbery, because it was once robbed before.

    • @nickmandleberg
      @nickmandleberg 2 года назад +2

      @@mitsuomits9077 @Edward Oneil and the only reason the painting holds 'such power' is because having being stolen from the Louvre in 1911, the sensational news story spread across the globe and the resulting hype surrounding the heist created a legend. Before then it was never singled out and received no special reverence among Da Vinci's other works on display at the Louvre.

    • @davidmutchler2403
      @davidmutchler2403 2 года назад

      @@nickmandleberg yes

  • @thomcrowley1043
    @thomcrowley1043 3 года назад

    The accomplishment in the Mona lisa Is the artists Abilities. He was so obviously Inspired Why is that a surprise?

  • @meherbabaisgodinhumanform3090
    @meherbabaisgodinhumanform3090 2 года назад

    Enlightening!

  • @lindabahlmann9442
    @lindabahlmann9442 2 года назад

    They should display the picture by candles!

  • @walterulasinksi7031
    @walterulasinksi7031 3 года назад +3

    The painting is of Lisa Giancondobut was commissioned by Juliano DeMedici as despite her marriage, Lisa was Juliano’s mistress and Was the father of Lisa’s children. ( the reason for the conspiratorial smile and the gaze). Leonardo knew this and had actually painted two portraits of Lisa. The first ( the Isleworth) was painted for Juliano and was unfinished as at that time Lisa, who Leonardo had known from childhood as they lived a few doors away fro each other, at that time was unfulfilled in her life. So there was no background and was painted with window columns on canvas.
    The second ,( in the Louvre), was painted as a memorial picture. But Mina Lisa’ s children could not afford it so Leonardo took it with him when he moved to France. Easy enough as this one is on wood. It no longer looks out a window and the painting is fulfilled.

    • @frederickgramcko5758
      @frederickgramcko5758 2 года назад

      Sorry, no. It's not a painting of a real person. It's genius when you figure it out.

    • @walterulasinksi7031
      @walterulasinksi7031 2 года назад

      @@frederickgramcko5758 it is documented that the painter Raphael had visited Da Vinci’s workshop and did a sketch of a painting on Leonardo’ easel. It is of Mona Lisa. The sketch still exists and shows her between two columns so it is likely that it was the “ Isleworth” Mona Lisa, that version was painted in Canvas as opposed to his regular wood base.

    • @frederickgramcko5758
      @frederickgramcko5758 2 года назад

      @@walterulasinksi7031 What is hidden in the MONA LISA painting is what made Davinci a genius. He didn't want to be burned at the stake like so many in his time. EVEN the very name MONA LISA has meaning. First figure out what the name means and go from there.

    • @walterulasinksi7031
      @walterulasinksi7031 2 года назад

      @@frederickgramcko5758 Lisa has been investigated historically, it has been found that Lisa who became Lisa Giancondo grew upon the same street as Leonardos workshop. Just a few doors away. The historical evidence in the archives also do not have any type of contract ( a legal requirement) between Lisa’s husband and Leonardo. And since Leonardo was constantly being commissioned by D’ Medici that a quick canvass painting would not have been noticed as he did not have to buy a panel from a woodworker. Canvas as frequently used in workshops especially for assistants and was purchased in bulk amounts. As would be the wood for the stretchers. The term Mona was one given to respect her position. It is a cultural meaning, not a name.

    • @frederickgramcko5758
      @frederickgramcko5758 2 года назад +1

      @@walterulasinksi7031 incorrect, of course. If you can't figure it out, that is on you. Your theory, or someone else's your espousing, is not even close. Try again.

  • @jpgolan1944
    @jpgolan1944 3 года назад +5

    I found the dramatization useless and would rather have more about the paining itself, the imagery, the art.

    • @Sam-gw5pl
      @Sam-gw5pl 3 года назад

      I’m sure there are many documentaries about the technique on here

  • @nhungtran-uo2ud
    @nhungtran-uo2ud 2 года назад

    Fascinating and intriguing!

  • @rockalot1635
    @rockalot1635 2 года назад

    Take a picture of the painting. You c the dots on each side. Also in background, you will see something else on each side, line these up. U will know what mean. What do u see

  • @larzhillbot1443
    @larzhillbot1443 2 года назад +1

    The Mona Lisa painting i grew up looking at never had a Smile She had a Frown Thanks to the Mandela effect she now Smiles Alternate Reality

    • @woody8191
      @woody8191 2 года назад +1

      Wasn't a part of the art of Mona Lisa that some people see her smile and some see her frown?
      Your perception has changed as you got older maybe, where when you were younger you saw a frown now you see a smile.

    • @lauraengel8894
      @lauraengel8894 2 года назад

      Ì agree she never ever smiled

  • @michaelmendillo7513
    @michaelmendillo7513 3 года назад +1

    I don't believe it is anything more than a portrait painted by a great artist,,,

  • @wisdompie7497
    @wisdompie7497 2 года назад +2

    The Mona Lisa = The Feminine Leonardo Da Vinci

  • @abcde_fz
    @abcde_fz 2 года назад +2

    Personally, I'm not a big fan of painting, in the main. But there are exceptions to my 'rule'.
    There are some works with brush and oil and canvas and pigment that draw me in, engage my thoughts and emotions as much as anyone's.
    However, in the documentary here, I'm much more interested and intellectually satisfied by the methods, tools, and technology used to try and puzzle out the specific history of the Mona Lisa.
    But come on, there is **no way** you can't get a little thrill out of the fact that after his preliminary work, with charcoal and pencil, to settle on his composition's final form,
    da Vinci settled down and created the most famous portrait on Earth in essentially one go.
    Theories of his having worked on the portrait over time and several sessions have been called into serious question, after the leading experts in the field, using the most advanced tools they had available, concluded that the master had brought this woman to life in one session, and the landscape she is in, in the next.
    That's pretty goddamned impressive by any measure... Worthy of admiration even when one is more interested in the research OF the work than the work itself.
    Or so I thought... :-) :-)

  • @mitsuomits9077
    @mitsuomits9077 2 года назад +12

    I find it absurd that someone might determine that there won't be anymore new Leonardo's paintings to be find; as if Leonardo ever listed every single painting he had ever made. How arrogant! Also, about the eyebrows of Mona Lisa, I know they've discovered not so long ago that she did have eyebrows but that they've vanished with time.

    • @boburwell9921
      @boburwell9921 2 года назад

      I find your comments arrogant

    • @loveee773
      @loveee773 2 года назад +1

      @@boburwell9921 Bir ustaya karşı böyle kötü cümleler kurmanız çok yanlış sözlerinizi seçerek konuşun lütfen

    • @boburwell9921
      @boburwell9921 2 года назад

      @@loveee773 uh?? Translation porfavor

    • @loveee773
      @loveee773 2 года назад +1

      @@boburwell9921 do not understand what you mean

    • @sunnyfaeth8852
      @sunnyfaeth8852 2 года назад

      J

  • @shelleyharris2850
    @shelleyharris2850 2 года назад

    Yes

  • @mariajorginasousa5946
    @mariajorginasousa5946 2 года назад +1

    To me Leonardo painting an alien 👽

  • @cebuanoboiph
    @cebuanoboiph 3 года назад +2

    ISNT SHE NOT SMILING BEFORE?

  • @josephdsouza8238
    @josephdsouza8238 Год назад

    Mona Lisa ♥️

  • @heidiengellenner9651
    @heidiengellenner9651 2 года назад

    Sullys- payment for suite purchase was pulled out of the animal kingdom fund- as his earnings are always shared. Irana purchased her Suite too..

  • @patricianewman1034
    @patricianewman1034 2 года назад +1

    I bought an old picture of Mona Lisa with hidden messages. What art expert would know the origin. No one seems to know

  • @outlandishyute8528
    @outlandishyute8528 3 года назад +1

    So intriguing but I believe Leonardo was just a great artist and Mona Lisa possibly existed. I don’t think he was tryna finesse.

    • @zhylviawardzon1933
      @zhylviawardzon1933 3 года назад +1

      Actually, He did! UNTIL now a days, He's still fixing her ready for her grand Day.
      All I can say is that, " GOD is good! All the time! GOD is so good " AMEN AND AMEN.

  • @HeatherSmith-np5kc
    @HeatherSmith-np5kc 2 года назад +3

    It’s actually giacamo. Da Vincis male lover. He was the subject in many of Leonardo’s paintings. Look at the face as magdelena in the last super. It’s uncanny

  • @lewis7315
    @lewis7315 2 года назад +2

    they say that the Mona Lisa was a self portrait... hence "her" smile :)

  • @NotTodayZurg
    @NotTodayZurg Год назад

    Plot twist: they find Sharpie marks in the underpainting instead of charcoal

  • @g.b.-garcia1876
    @g.b.-garcia1876 2 года назад +4

    The Mona Lisa Smile
    A subliminal foreshortened bridge.
    The bridge marries two scenic
    landscapes on each side of her face drawing focus to her smile.
    Darkness, shadow, and light is
    transformed into a smile that
    Pinnacles laterally across her
    face. Thus, creating a visual
    bridge that transcends the Mona
    Lisa face. A mirage of a near
    perfect third dimension. An illusionary idea expressed in paint
    through the viewer’s eye imprinting on to the mind as a visual subliminal. daVinci divides consciousness and the unconscious with a visual illusion. An intentional deception to master and deceive an overt eye of visual perception as it is perceived by the viewer’s eye.
    Leonardo da Vinci mastered the subliminal mind and the overt eye with paint to fashion the Mona Lisa Smile.
    G. B.-Garcia 2019(cc)

  • @annaloph
    @annaloph 2 года назад +1

    👨‍🎨🌟🎨💜🌍👏

  • @christineterry3079
    @christineterry3079 3 года назад +3

    Who ever she was! It would of been nice to know the story ! she was important to him to want to paint her thats all that mattered to him... maybe one day we will know the true story. And yet if it was a wife portrait as mentioned they are saying he was commissioned to do paint . how come their is no wedding ring on her wedding finger just a thought .

    • @zhylviawardzon1933
      @zhylviawardzon1933 3 года назад +3

      Ha ha ha! You got that right, cause she's not the one in the painting, SOMEONE that is very special to the painter, and she's pregnant. Guess who is the Father?

    • @christineterry3079
      @christineterry3079 2 года назад +1

      @@zhylviawardzon1933 Leonardo !!.. I guess ! OK on that point maybe he as so many other children! that he fatherd outside his marriage then who knows ! Obviously a bit of a womaniser then by the sound of it ..

  • @shelleyharris2850
    @shelleyharris2850 2 года назад +1

    The wallpaper

  • @mathstar4176
    @mathstar4176 2 года назад +2

    No eye brows and no eye 👁️ lashes

  • @conniecharley1927
    @conniecharley1927 2 года назад

    I believe they took some images of this paper in some way and found the face was showing parts of the painter himself.. Now I saw this many years ago. Dont know any truth to what I am saying but saw it with my own eyes.

  • @lablabchannel3171
    @lablabchannel3171 2 года назад +1

    Mona lisa is a imaginary woman then da Vinci feel inlove to this painting and imagining what if it true that this woman is real that's why the bridge behind mona lisa real....
    ....just saying😊

  • @lrmodranoel
    @lrmodranoel 2 года назад +3

    Originally the Mona Lisa had lashes and eye brows, but with time, cleaning the portrait wiped away these features.

  • @heidiengellenner9651
    @heidiengellenner9651 2 года назад

    Isadore- we will not open up the portal fro animals to transport over to Uranus until I return to Isadore. It is a choice for them, they are not forced. When they accpet their bionic suit for Uranus they agree to share in Marys dream (bringing the universe into Isadore). No contrubtuion is ever accrued, they agree to 3 hours additional trade forever in exchange for the suit.

    • @heidiengellenner9651
      @heidiengellenner9651 2 года назад

      Absoultley that still works for Rex (Trinosaur) we would not do anything that did not work for Rex. Rex can go to Uranus daily with either one of his boys or both on their indiviudal time. Anything base to top chair, means anything.. Let me tell you on Uranus- from the water subs, you will get to see dinosaurs diving, bears, dears swimming. Or Wales and dolphins flying. You will get to experince things that you never thought were possible. It all adds to flavor and the flare.

    • @heidiengellenner9651
      @heidiengellenner9651 2 года назад

      On tradditional Isadore, the bears, tigers can breath underwater. But they cant speed swim, so they dont spend as much time in the water. Uranus with their bionic suits they will be able to speed swim.

  • @floriannaramirez394
    @floriannaramirez394 Год назад +1

    I find the ¨Great Art Explained¨ video on the Mona Lisa much superior to this one.

  • @lordharrington1945
    @lordharrington1945 3 года назад +6

    Superb and hauntingly delicious. I suspect she is the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Gaius Heléne Mohiam, which doesn't negate the premise.

  • @bigtoelittlefinger6133
    @bigtoelittlefinger6133 2 года назад +2

    Do u ever wonder some one shaved her eyebrows aff at a party

  • @seekeroftruth399
    @seekeroftruth399 2 года назад

    Has nobody ever seen empathy before?

  • @paulfredrick6429
    @paulfredrick6429 2 года назад +1

    its me.

  • @azucarinho1
    @azucarinho1 2 года назад +1

    Géricault's Raft of the Medusa is more interesting

  • @ahydac.2816
    @ahydac.2816 2 года назад +2

    I agree with a lot of people here, it is his lover since he was gay and back then you needed to keep these things secret. The smile is the secret they both had.
    For all the ones who don't understand, being gsy has nothing to do, I'm saying I think the mona lisa is a painting of his male lover in disguise and he was simply trying to hide that in those times.

  • @sagarkunwar3976
    @sagarkunwar3976 9 месяцев назад +1

    Jesus ❣❣

  • @miraladdinhashmi2307
    @miraladdinhashmi2307 4 месяца назад

    ❤The reason behind Monalisa (Marry)was happy because, she was pregnant (jesus)was in her womb. This would be a dream seen by Lenordo davinchi. 🎉