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'Mona Lisa' Copy Done Hand In Hand With Da Vinci (VIDEO)

By DANIEL WOOLLS   02/ 1/12 12:43 PM ET  AP

MADRID -- A "Mona Lisa" copy owned by Spain's Prado Museum was almost certainly painted by one of Leonardo da Vinci's apprentices alongside the master himself as he did the original, museum officials said Wednesday.

The stunning find of what the Prado now says is probably the earliest known copy of La Gioconda will give art lovers and experts an idea of what the Mona Lisa looked like back in the 16th century, said Gabriele Finaldi, the museum's deputy director collections.

"It is as if we were in the same studio, standing at the next easel," he told reporters.

The copy has been part of the Prado collection for years and displayed occasionally but no one paid much attention to it because around the woman in the Mona Lisa was a stark black background, not the pretty landscape seen in the original.

Two years ago, to get the copy ready for a da Vinci exhibit later this year in Paris, where the original hangs in the Louvre, tests were done and this gave restorers a hint that something lie under the black coat, which was added in the 18th century for reasons not fully understood.

When the black covering was removed, a Tuscan landscape very similar to the one in the original emerged.

And X-ray tests which allow experts to peek under a painting's surface to see how it developed as it was composed showed that changes made in the copy were similar to changes made to the original as it evolved.

Varnish has also been removed from the Mona Lisa's face, making it look brighter and younger than the face coated with cracked, darkish varnish at the Paris museum.

"You can imagine that this is what the Mona Lisa looked like back in the 16th century," Finaldi said.

Miguel Falomir, the Prado's director for Italian painting, said the copy gives art lovers and experts a chance "to admire the Mona Lisa with totally different eyes."

He and Finaldi said the museum's best guess is that the copy was done by a da Vinci apprentice named Francesco Melzi, because of the style observed in it.

Besides the black background, one other difference from the original is the woman in the copy has eyebrows and the Mona Lisa in the real masterpiece does not.

There are dozens of the surviving replicas of the masterpiece from the 16th and 17th centuries.

The Louvre supports the Prado's new evaluation of the painting, Finaldi said.

The Prado plans to put it on display later this month before it travels to France for the da Vinci show.

___

Ciaran Giles contributed to this report.

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View of an authenticated contemporary copy of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa presented at the Prado Museum in Madrid on February 1, 2012 after it was found in its vaults. According to details of experts' findings published by the specialist British journal The Art Newspaper and the Spanish media, the work is a copy painted in Da Vinci's studio by one of his pupils.

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MADRID -- A "Mona Lisa" copy owned by Spain's Prado Museum was almost certainly painted by one of Leonardo da Vinci's apprentices alongside the master himself as he did the original, museum officials ...
MADRID -- A "Mona Lisa" copy owned by Spain's Prado Museum was almost certainly painted by one of Leonardo da Vinci's apprentices alongside the master himself as he did the original, museum officials ...
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05:30 PM on 02/03/2012
I find the colors in this painting much richer than the one painted by Leonardo Da Vinci. I'd LOVE a copy of this one on my wall...!
01:01 PM on 02/03/2012
Im gonna try again.... Wanna see who Mona Lisa is? Watch this video. Dont be afraid of what you see. Sometimes things ARE this simple..... Just watch.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=Et9pulcD240
10:43 PM on 02/09/2012
Intersting hypothesist. But it is not any different than what has been said by many other speculators and 'experts' of DaVinci.

There actually is an even more simpler explination as to why "Mona Lisa" and DaVinci's "John the Baptist look alike. A common everyday reason that will make you slap your head and say, "Oh, I get it!, No wonder, of course!" it also answers why there are frequently reoccuring faces within the DaVinci circle of artist, and why numerous copies were made and why they ened up in royal houses and not with the Gherardini family, It will answer where Leonardo was during all those "silent years". and why the fabrication of the silk merchant's wife was started.

Leonardo's true story is of EPIC proportions and the truth needs to finally be accepted! The world is tired of sensationalism, specualtion and theories, We want somthing that can be proven with unquestionable proofs, and even DNA. If you are ready for the mystery to be over then see Kleio.org, or www.facebook.com/#1/thetruemonalisa

I hope the Prado painting helps bring us one step closer to her true identity and her real story!

... maybe there is hope that the 16th Century Italian copy will get "discovered" too! Please, reply back if you find all of this extremely fascinating as I did, 2 yrs ago! Thanks for your time!
11:53 PM on 02/09/2012
I never said that Mona Lisa and John are similar. John is clear as daylight. He is the lion image on top of Africa. Mona Lisa is the part of Africa that is still moving. There are Two More Videos. Youll see how i got to my conclusion. Look it up on you tube.

lumky069

Time to relearn.
09:34 AM on 02/03/2012
Thanks for posting this! Fascinating. I wrote an article for my students on how the original Mona Lisa would have had eyebrows, catch lights in the eyes, and far greater detail in the hands.

It is great to see this copy. You can read the article here:

http://www.sandstead.com/essays/cleaning_mona_lisa/

Best,

Lee
www.sandstead.com
02:46 AM on 02/10/2012
Dear Sandstead,

Yes, the lighting is coming from the upper left side and notably catches on the sheer veiling on her left shoulder, highlighting the natural creases on her fabric across her upper arms. This painting shows that so much better than the Louvre painting.

However, I am completly puzzled as to why the museum is claiming it is discovered. It is one of the better known early replicas out there. Upon seeing it the first time, over a yr ago, I immediately knew it contained visual information that was practically lost in the Louvre painting.

But, this painting contains even greater information than about what she is wearing and other artistic details; it contains information on what her station was in life. She is wearing the colors of the powerful Sforza-Visconti dynasty of which we know Leonardo was a court painter for over 11+ years. Silk merchants wives or men in drag were taking their lives into their own hands if they were to impersonate royalty. ...not a good idea!

Her true story and Leonardo's is fascinating but was concealed for a reason. see Kleio.org

Do you know of the 16th century Italian copy with the two pillars on each side, exact location unknown?

http://www.apollo-magazine.com/september-2006/70322/reynoldss-mona-lisa.thtml

Do you believe it could be by DaVinci?


The 'discovery' of the Prado "Mona Lisa" gives me hope that the Italian copy will also get its long over due recognition.
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candy8teen
Just having fun
11:24 PM on 02/02/2012
I will never understand the fascination with this painting. I am glade it makes people happy .
11:23 PM on 02/02/2012
Leonardo da Vinci was also an inventor, engineer, draftsman, submarine and flight expert, and armor expert. He could reportedly take a brush and with one circular stroke paint a perfect circle on a board. His parents were reportedly a titled man and a maid and he was made an apprentice to an art studio when young where he studied art. He made a living by being sponsored by wealthy and titled people and working for them (just like classical music composers). He was reportedly strong and athletic. In ancient Israel, young athletic rabbis would study theology and also do somersaults and back-flips while on religious parades. The ancient Greeks also coordinated physical strength and agility with studies of philosophy and the humanities and felt that mathematics was the basis of the entire universe.
11:19 PM on 02/02/2012
Beautiful painting & full of life.....Is this what the version in the Louvre would look like if they cleaned it? If so, they should consider doing it.
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llozano
Live and let live...
11:14 PM on 02/02/2012
The student's name was Xerox from where we get the name of the current copiers. Just kidding I made it up.
11:28 PM on 02/02/2012
To llozano: However, all paper copiers should not be called Xerox machines because Xerox is the name of a copy company. But people tend to say that they will go into another room and make a xerox copy. But maybe student Xerox had a twin brother named Xorex.
10:34 PM on 02/02/2012
People truly have an obsession with this painting. It completes them. lol
10:02 PM on 02/02/2012
That's a very interesting article. It shows the exceptional skill of his pupils and brings the young Mona Lisa to a new light. Much prettier...
The student may have gotten ahead of the teacher and did the eyebrows and lashes too. Maybe, he pissed off Leonardo, and he painted it black... just a thought.... :)
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ZenCrusader
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09:52 PM on 02/02/2012
All I could afford was the poster - but - I've always been really pleased with the huge Warhol double gold Mona Lisa that hangs above our sofa.
09:42 PM on 02/02/2012
Well! They finally got her eyebrows right! I'm an artist and have always been perturbed by Mona Lisa's eyebrows! They always looked non existent, but now they look like a young girl's eyebrows should look! I just hope that this new look will be the one that is the genuine Mona!
09:19 PM on 02/02/2012
Check out the incredible Mona Lisa Digital Restoration Project on Kickstarter dot com. The artist used the Prado copy (before the background was removed) as part of the research in re-creating the original brilliant color, dazzling landscape, and fine anatomical details, such as the eyebrows and eyelashes, as can be seen in the Prado Museum version.
09:12 PM on 02/02/2012
I say they dont know squat. The Mona lisa is Africa. Da Vinci was telling a story. I believe i decifered part of it. I could be wrong. But a second opinion would be nice. Watch this

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=Et9pulcD240
08:48 PM on 02/02/2012
A friend had gone to the Louvre and seen the Mona Lisa. When I asked what he thought of it, he said, "Like the Hunchback of Notre Dame, it's famous, full of heart and soul but not nice to look at." I'm a New Yorker, and I get to the Metropolitan Museum Of Art a few times a year. The Met has a handful of Rembrandts. When people ask me about them, I say, "Dark paintings of ugly people." On the other hand, the paintings of Vermeer, Fragonard, Boucher and Watteau, and Titian and stunning, full of light and color.
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08:48 PM on 02/02/2012
yeah, as it turns out, da vinci sold dozens of these things in the marketplace to pay off a bar tab...