Again... Mona Lisa

The Mona Lisa (size 77 x 53 cm, oil on wood) is a half-length portrait painting by the Italian artist Leonardo da Vinci. The Mona Lisa is known by other names, including La Gioconda (light-hearted woman in Italian).
It is considered an archetypal masterpiece of the Italian Renaissance.
Leonardo Da Vinci painted the Mona Lisa from 1503 to 1506, but was considered incomplete by Da Vinci until 1516. Da Vinci was never paid for the painting and it never made it to it's intended client. ... Her husband, Francesco del Giocondo was a wealthy cloth merchant in Florence who never received his painting.
The Mona Lisa is one of the most recognizable and famous works of art in the world, and also one of the most replicated and reinterpreted. Mona Lisa replicas were already being painted during Leonardo's lifetime by his own students and contemporaries. Some are claimed to be the work of Leonardo himself, and remain disputed by scholars. Prominent 20th-century artists such as Marcel Duchamp and Salvador Dalí have also produced derivative works, manipulating Mona Lisa's image to suit their own aesthetic.
As artists distorted, disfigured, and played with reproductions of the Mona Lisa, cartoonists and admen exaggerated her further still. Over the decades, as technology improved, the painting was endlessly reproduced, sometimes manipulated and sometimes not, so that the sitter’s face became one of the most well known in the world, even to those who had little interest in art.
Although the Mona Lisa is undoubtedly good art, there is no single reason for its celebrity. Rather, it is hundreds of circumstances—from its fortuitous arrival at the Louvre to the mythmaking of the 19th century to the endless reproductions of the 20th and 21st centuries—that have all worked together with the painting’s inherent appeal to make the Mona Lisa the world’s most famous painting ever.

 
'Moja Lisa'
Acrylic and tempera on canvas by Artanq 


Mixed media on paper by Artanq 


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