Lina Saifan
ARTH 1010-81
Assignment 3
Professor Williams.
The Mona Lisa
One of my most favorite paintings in the history of Western art must be the Mona Lisa. This sixteenth- century oil painting is one of the world’s most famous paintings. It was painted by the famous Italian painter, architect, sculpture, draftsman, and engineer Leonardo da Vinci. It is well known that the Mona Lisa painting is portrayed as the most visited, viewed, written, and sung about painting in the world. This portrait took Leonardo da Vinci about three to four years to complete. Mona Lisa is said to be one of his favorite art work; therefore, he took his time painting and finishing it.
The Mona Lisa represents a composition with an immense value. The subject of the painting itself is mysterious; therefore, the fascination and interest in da Vinci’s work attracted millions across the world. This caused a huge interest in the audience because the Mona Lisa has no identity. Everyone is curious and inquisitive to know who this beautiful woman is. Until this day, no one really knows the real identity of Mona Lisa. In addition, the smile on the face of the woman in the painting caused mixed thoughts. This painting is considered to be one of the greatest mysteries as pertaining to the identity of the subject.
The portrait consists of a figure of a woman with vital expressions that added a significance feature to the painting. It is set within a mountainous landscape illustrated in the softest
The Mona Lisa is a famous painting created by Leonardo Da Vinci. Art today has been sold for millions of dollars. Art is believed to be a great way to express emotion. There are many famous artists in the world and there still is even today. There are also many different forms of art, including sculptures, paintings, drawings, and many others. Art is a great way to express someone’s personality, skills, and other characteristics.
The Mona Lisa has been one of the most debated paintings of all time. The look on the face of the women in this painting leaves a person’s mind wondering. No one really seems to know what this mysterious woman is thinking or feeling. The questions that cannot seem to be answered are what make this painting so famous. The reason for that is because it is raveled in mystery and secrets. All of the small details make the painting stand out by being different from others and the details also make it far more remarkable as well. And surely, the smirk on the face of the Mona Lisa is the major key factor to the painting being so interesting. “Leonardo da Vinci was one of the
Art is one aspect of the past that has carried on for decades. Art in any form may it be poetry, novels, and playwright, sculpting as well as painting, has been an outlet for generations and continues to be an outlet and a means for expression. This paper will discuss “ The Mona Lisa” one of Da Vinci’s most famous paintings, as well as another great painting, Antonio Veneziano’s
The very famous Mona Lisa was great inspiration for many other art pieces, but none as famous as itself except for Andy Warhol’s silkscreens of the Mona Lisa. It is said that he was so consumed by the famousness and celebrity that the painting created that he became obsessed with it for the rest of his life. His creation of his own Mona Lisa pieces, as well as his Jackie series and his Marilyn series and all the series that Warhol created of the many
Leonardo took four years to complete the painting: he began work in 1503 and finishes in 1607. Mona (or Madonna Lisa Gherardini) was from a noble family in Naples, and Leonardo may have painted her on commission from her husband. Leonardo is said to entertain Mona Lisa with six musicians. He installs a musical fountain where the water plays on small glass spheres, and he gives Mona a puppy and a white Persian cat to play with. Leonardo does what he can to keep Mona smiling during the long hours she sits for him. But it is not only Mona's mysterious smile that has impressed anyone who has ever viewed the portrait: the background landscape is just as mysterious and beautiful. The portrait can be seen today in the Louvre Museum in
The Mona Lisa was Leonardo’s most famous painting. In painting this piece, Leonardo took art to a whole new level. See the trees in the background? and the dirt road the gradually gets smaller? He made distance in this painting by doing these things. Being that he used oil paints, added a greater contrast, and a glow to her and the background. A great painting overall, but a things that were questionable. Where’s her eyebrows? Mr. Cotte conclusion is
Mona Lisa is famous for many reasons one because most of the artwork during the Renaissance period were of biblical events and scenes. Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa stood out among those artworks because it was not of a religious text or martyr. The painting is an introduction to sfumato which is a technique Da Vinci used at the corners of Mona Lisa’s lips and the corners of her eyes exploring natural emotion along with detailed realness of her hands. Mona Lisa is an excellent example of created illusions of space and depth within its beautiful landscape muted in the background (Totally History, 2012).
I have always been intrigued with the Mona Lisa, I don’t know why but there is something about her smile and her eyes that captivates me. The realness of the painting and how ordinary the Mona Lisa is the reason why I can look at this painting with great joy, it doesn’t make me think too much, it doesn’t confuse me, the simplicity and the normalcy of this painting is what I enjoy so much. However, after an analysis you can see that the painting isn’t so ordinary.
Painting portraits, portraits of women, youth and loved ones became more popular than scenery. Here, women are no longer mythological creatures and have stepped out into everyday life, although there is still an air of idealism around them. (Fig. 2)is a work of this period with an emphasis on the female element.
His two most famous paintings that he is known for are “The Mona Lisa,” and “The Last Supper.” He was a great artist but only fifteen or so of Leonardo’s paintings survived, many of his paintings were destroyed in the war. Mona Lisa one of Leonardo’s most famous painting was done somewhere around 1503. The Mona Lisa is the earliest Italian portrait to focus so closely on the sitter in a half-length portrait. The Last Supper his second most famous painting he began to paint it in 1495 and it was completed in 1498. He was commission to do the painting by the Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza. The Virgin and Child with St. Anne painted in 1472-1475. These are just some of Leonardo da Vinci paintings. Leonardo was a man that was truly a Renaissance man. In the context of art history, Leonardo’s bold, unconventional, innovative ideas and statements are certainly extraordinary and his empirical methods remarkable for their time, but there is nothing mysterious about his admirably logical “vision of the world”; and in the field of visual art, Leonardo ‘works proved to be a lasting influence. A direct line can be traced from such works of Leonardo dating from the last twenty years of the fifteenth century.
While maybe producing a total of 20 paintings before his death, Da Vinci has made some of the most renowned pieces in art history. For example, the “Mona Lisa” it is undoubtedly the most recognizable piece of art in the world. Painted in 1503, “Mona Lisa” is the main attraction at the Louvre in Paris where it is viewed by 6 million people every year (Top 10 Most Famous Paintings). What is most talked about in this piece is Lisa’s cryptic half-smile. There have been many theories surrounding this smile, but recently a face-recognition software determined that Leonardo Da Vinci's “Mona Lisa” is 83% happy, 9% disgusted, 6% fearful, and 2% angry (New Scientist). The “Mona Lisa” and “The Last Supper” are a few of Da Vinci’s
The forefront and the centerpiece of the painting is the girl. The girl sitting upon the marble garden bench dressed in a medieval styled white silken dress accompanied by an gauzy, classically-draped loose sleeves. Her pale brown wavy hair is centrally parted and neatly dressed behind her back. Balanced on her lap lays a blue covered book with a metallic clasp, while the book rest on her lap her rests her right elbow in her left hand and holds a sprig of blossom up to her neck as she
The Mona Lisa has to be one of my favorite paintings of all time and has lead me to use this specific painting as a topic for this paper. Not to mention the love I have for Leonardo da Vinci. I, myself have always been drawn to da Vinci’s paintings and all of his other achievements that he has given us during his life. I, like Leonardo da Vinci love art and science just as much as it seems he did. He shares a love of art and a fondness for science. It also seems that he loves a good mystery, and the Mona Lisa just happens to be one clouded in mystery. And I too love a good mystery.
While painting The Battle of Anghiari, Leonardo started working on one of the most famous paintings ever made, Mona Lisa (Leonardo world ¶ 12 and 31). Leonardo probably used the wife of a Florentine silk merchant as his model of Mona Lisa (¶ 12 and
Leonardo Da vinci painted the “Mona Lisa” in 1503. The artist portrays a young woman, which acquires the concept of feminine youth and more essentially the concept of elegance. In relation to Agnolo firenzuola’s novel “On The Beauty Of Women” , the portrait attributes to major physical characteristics in which is considered to be genuine beauty by the modern man. Seeing the female portraiture of the italian renaissance, Firenzuola implies a specific interpretation by analyzing the modern woman. Through the famous paintings illustrated by Leonardo da Vinci, the Mona Lisa specifically supports the arguments and claims made by the poet’s correspondence to the beauty of women. Along with Da Vinci’s sticking features, the artist paints Firenzuola’s ideal beauty in comparability to the appearance of definitive grace. With his analyzations being extremely aesthetic, Firenzuolo activates criticizing aspects of the proportions of the figure, the placement of the figure’s position and the importance of the half length portrait of the feminine nature in relation to the portraiture of Mona Lisa.